Disclaimer first: I have an Enertia +, and have nothing to add relevant to cost of service. So, feel free to skip the rest, as it's mostly an op-ed piece on local service in the PNW.
What I can say, for those riders in the general Seattle area:
- I had an absolutely awful experience with Seattle E-Bike. My service was delayed because of a fire in their shop (which still has me wondering what may have gotten smoke damaged, since apparently the dashboard unit isn't sealed), but neglecting that, my bike was handed back to me in horrendous condition (6" scratch on top plastic, among others, front tire pressure well below safe level, greasy handprints everywhere, headlight pointed sky-high, rather shoddy workmanship in general, the work to be performed was done, but not tested, and the bike had the same problem when I received it back). I have a thread on that if anyone wants to search for it, but you don't want them laying a greasy hand or a sharp, pointy wrench on or anywhere near your bike. Cannot caution anyone enough.
- I next went to Lynnwood Motoplex. It's a bro shop. Like, motocross bros, mostly. This isn't a bad thing, I'm just used to an awesome BMW dealer that treats customers and bikes with priority, nothing's rushed, eveything's done right. Goal: Rebuild forks (Marzocchi, shouldn't be too hard) because seals were leaking. Delay in receiving parts (back ordered, I think?) but I cannot fault them entirely, as my bike model is the most orphaned of the lot. Work was performed, I'm happy. They did what was expected, and didn't damage my bike in the process. I received a call several weeks later, they wanted to confirm my VIN since Polaris wasn't showing it in their system. Maybe I'm too orphaned, but it's where Brammo sent me so it shouldn't have been an issue. It does seem they had trouble communicating with Polaris, since they were trying to get reimbursed for warranty work. I saw the disconnect, but after the fact, not during. From what I saw and heard, the shortcoming is on the part of Polaris, and not Lynnwood Motoplex. <-- Note: I am not associated with them in any way, yadda yadda.
- Re: Fork rebuild at local Ducati shop. The two BMW dealers in Seattle are owned by the same person/group/corp. When I had my BMW in for service (to un-f*** the half-ass work Lone Star/Austin TX did to it) they mentioned they were acquiring the local Duc dealer(s?) as well. This is of concern, as my BMW came back to me with the same problem it had before (seeing a problem here?) even when I told them what I was sure was wrong. I called up after riding home, and was told that the tech felt it was "running normal for a bike of that vintage". It's a '99, and no, no it was not at all running proper. This is obviously *not* the awesome BMW dealer I referenced above. I eventually found an indy BMW mechanic in the area (PM if you want/need their name for Beemer service, I'm trying to not make this an advertisement) and yeah, it now runs like the proper beast it was meant to be. RideWest (or, as I've heard some refer to it, RideWorst) really did an entirely neglectful job of listening to the customer, and their techs there appear to be rather green and ill-informed and overall just not trained well, *at all*. I spent close to 2 decades spoiled by an absolutely amazing BMW dealer in SoCal, after Austin and Seattle I'm not sure which is the anomaly, as BMW dealers aren't supposed to be so rank-amateur about handling things. Anyway, point to all this: Exercise caution if you're considering a Seattle-area Ducati dealer, as they're tainted by the same ownership as the BMW dealer here. I don't want to spend a dime at either BMW dealer and have taken to ordering parts for my BMW from out of state on principle. That. Bad.
At this point, my bike's almost paid off, and I'm just hoping that someone's around to supply batteries in a few years when they're due for replacing.