How the job goes
- Order the rear hub motor wheel assembly from Lectric support; it comes pre-laced, which turns a wheelbuilding job into a wheel swap
- Disconnect the motor cable, remove the rear wheel (fat-tire torque arms and axle nuts, not quick release), transfer tire or fit new, reconnect and route the cable clear of the fold
- Test with the wheel off the ground before riding
Is it worth doing?
Hub motors rarely die outright; more often a controller, connector or sensor is the real fault. Diagnose with support before buying a motor: a bike that cuts power intermittently usually needs a cheaper part than a motor.
Warranty note
If the bike is within warranty, motor failures are Lectric's cost, not yours. Keep receipts and register the bike; the process is routine for them.
Rule out the cheap culprits first
A no-power or cutting-out XP 3.0 deserves twenty minutes of diagnosis before any parts order. Check the display for error codes and note them for support; code meanings shift across firmware versions, so let Lectric interpret them rather than a generic chart. Unplug the main motor connector and inspect for bent pins, moisture or the green tint of corrosion, then reseat it firmly. Distinguish the sounds: grinding or clunking under power points toward the hub itself, while silent no-response with a live display usually means controller, wiring or a brake-lever motor-cutoff switch stuck engaged. Owners report that last one, a sticky cutoff sensor, masquerading as motor death surprisingly often.
Swap-day details that trip people up
Photograph the axle before touching it: the order of washers, torque arms and nuts matters, and hub-motor axles must go back together exactly as they came apart. Torque arms are not optional decoration; they resist the motor's twist, and leaving one off or fitted backwards lets the axle chew up the dropout over time. Keep the wheel supported while unplugging so the connector never takes the wheel's weight, and route the new cable with enough slack for the frame's fold, checking through a full fold cycle before the first ride. Finally, snug the axle nuts firmly; a hub-motor wheel that shifts under torque can pull on its own wiring.
How long hub motors actually last
Owners generally report the hub motor as one of the longest-lived parts on bikes in this class; it commonly outlasts a battery or two. The wear points are mundane: axle bearings that develop play or noise after years, and the cable where it exits the axle, which suffers if the wheel was ever removed carelessly. There is no scheduled maintenance inside a sealed hub, so care amounts to keeping the connector dry and clean and never pressure-washing the hub directly. If your motor did fail early, ask support about the likely cause before fitting the new one; a failed controller can take a motor with it, and replacing only half of that pair invites a repeat.