Rad.ilm
New Member
This is what Rad says about their product support on their website; "With tens of thousands of five-star reviews under their belts, our in-house product support team is the best in the business. They love troubleshooting, are happy to talk you through your options, and will always make it right. Uh...no. I emailed Rad last week on Wednesday about an electrical issue I am having. I got an error 22, lost power, got power back, then my throttle smoked and killed all power. Rut-Ro. I thought I might have fried the system but I tested my controller, display and battery on my other Rad bike and they all work so I think I just need a new throttle and a wiring harness - which by the way, must be made out of hummingbird tongues and gossamer because you have to bend over backwards to get one from Rad. I'm on my third one so I've done this dance before. Anyway, I waited until Thursday afternoon (about 24 hours which I think is a reasonable amount of time to wait) and then emailed them again when they didn't reply. Today is Tuesday and I still have not had a response from a human. I've been a customer since 2018 and way back then you could actually talk to someone. I get that they are busy and I applaud them for growing their brand and market share, but it should not be at the expense of existing customers.
When my bike is working I like it well enough but you can definitely tell it's an entry level ebike. It's creaky, the rear brake rotor has always been warped and rubs against the pads, the kickstand is bent so much I have to level it with a board so the bike stands straight, and once a year I replace electrical components. But just because you sell entry level bikes doesn't mean you have to have entry level support. Don't pretend that you care about your customers. Actually care about them so they stay happy and don't end up writing stuff like this because they are pissed off. What did they do, get too many orders so they had to move the customer support elves over to the assembly line? Or maybe they got bombarded from too many customers with too many problems that they couldn't keep up and had to automate the process with a really bad mailbot? I don't know, maybe I'm not being patient enough, but given the subpar components that I have to keep replacing and the poor customer service that I am currently experiencing, I think my next ebike will probably not be from Rad.
When my bike is working I like it well enough but you can definitely tell it's an entry level ebike. It's creaky, the rear brake rotor has always been warped and rubs against the pads, the kickstand is bent so much I have to level it with a board so the bike stands straight, and once a year I replace electrical components. But just because you sell entry level bikes doesn't mean you have to have entry level support. Don't pretend that you care about your customers. Actually care about them so they stay happy and don't end up writing stuff like this because they are pissed off. What did they do, get too many orders so they had to move the customer support elves over to the assembly line? Or maybe they got bombarded from too many customers with too many problems that they couldn't keep up and had to automate the process with a really bad mailbot? I don't know, maybe I'm not being patient enough, but given the subpar components that I have to keep replacing and the poor customer service that I am currently experiencing, I think my next ebike will probably not be from Rad.