Good morning,
There is shop near me that sells only ebikes including Orbea, which can be Mahle based, so they do have all that is needed, so in this case it is purely a policy issue.
Again I can understand that, I did look at buying a bike from them but it would have been a D30 which was Claris rather than Tiagra, generic wheels rather than Mavic Kysrium and rim brakes rather than hydraulic disks and £700 more expensive.
So a no service for bikes bought elsewhere policy may be part of the explaining why you are getting so little bike for your money! £2,700 for aluminium frame, Claris and generic wheels
What seems so unreasonable is this
https://www.ribblecycles.co.uk/blog/caring-for-your-electric-bike-a-ribble-cycles-guide/
All of our e-bike models are equipped with the X35+ system, which features at its core a Panasonic 36V / 250Wh, 18650GA - 10S / 2P Lithium-Ion battery. The battery functions as the brains of the operation and can reach up to 500 charging cycles whilst retaining up to 90% of its total capacity. If it is appropriately maintained, that is.
Just search for Panasonic 18650GA and multiply the price by 20, £200 absolutely top wack, I would even understand if they were not user replacable and an extra £75 was added for labour.
It also indicates how "corporate"
Ribble have become, they have been selling X20 equiped bikes for a while now, someone must have noticed.
It seems that ebikes are/were a highly profitable sector of the market and hype took precedence over value, possibly also with the expectation that the sort of person who would but one wouldn't ride it much once the novelty wore off

I was talking to someone who has had a Ribble for nearly 4 years and his battery seems to be in a similar state to mine, I was confused until he said that he does around 5 miles a day on his.
I am really not sure if it is worth replacing the battery if they are only going to last a year, with the last 40Wh (ish) bein pretty much useless I am looking at a tad under a 150Wh battery at the moment! Added to which I have already replaced the freehub but I don't know if that is an indication of poor quality or just bad luck and I am starting to have reservations on motor life as all the other parts of the system seem so fragile.
As shown below the motor engages with the freehub assembly with hard "plastic" cogs, now they may last forever or be close to worn out, I am not sure.
Bye
Ian
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