Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 60 total)
  • Am I being unreasonable? – Sonder Bikes
  • grizzly
    Free Member

    So, I placed an order for a Sonder Camino GRX in the sale last month – £1299. Wanted a couple of changes – 165mm cranks instead of the 172.5 standard and change the left lever to the dropper post version. Asked for a quote – £1449. Ok, fair enough, got a cycle 2 work voucher for £1450 and send it.

    Build was meant to start today but on my account now says 3rd May. Got on the chat for an update and they said it was because of the cranks. But also wanted £274 “for the changes asked for”. I explained I had been quoted £1449 for the build but apparently that doesn’t include the left dropper lever. So £274 for the dropper lever which I asked for in the original quote (available for £162 on Sigma sports!).

    Said I could send that to them for the build and not pay the £274. I asked if they could just send a standard build plus the 165 cranks which I have paid for but apparently them keeping the original cranks was factored into the cost. When I asked “so I’m being charged £150 to have it built with 165mm cranks?” They came back with the cranks are a special order which cost £149.99 -15% = £124.99.

    Surely I have paid for a standard build £1299 plus £149.99 for the cranks (never mind the dropper lever “not included in the quote”) and they should be able to send me a standard build PLUS the cranks so I can at least sell the standard ones on?

    What should I do? If it was a normal order I would cancel but it’s cycle 2 work so more of a pain in the arse.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    I’d just ask them to send the standard build, but the components myself and sell the unused bits. Long-winded right enough and shouldn’t really be necessary but dealing with custom changes like this can be a pain for the retailer so I can sort of see where the costs come about.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Dont forget the labour charges to do the swaps

    convert
    Full Member

    Yes, I’d say there is some muddled maths their end. You can’t tell someone the special order part is costing £125, they are paying £150 extra for it but not getting the original in the box too. That’s daft.

    And was the correspondence re the quote clear that you wanted both cranks and lever change? If so, coming back now and wanting the extra seems off too.

    If course…cough…is this c2W voucher actually for cycling to work? My righteous moral high ground to get miffed might be lessened if I was gaming the system for a toy…..just sayin.

    convert
    Full Member

    tjagain
    Full Member
    Dont forget the labour charges to do the swaps

    From memory alpkit/sonder build up in batches as they sell them…..they were bolting a crank and a lever on anyway – bit more admin agro but no more spannering.

    mrbadger
    Free Member

    Yeah replacing the cranks shouldn’t cost the price of the cranks rrp when you are then not getting the set they are presumably squirreling away for another bike build. I don’t think you are being unreasonable here

    Re the lever, just tell them to forget it and buy and fit yourself for cheaper. Or just get a fox one which is perfectly fine for the job at a third the cost

    razorrazoo
    Full Member

    Agree with above, just ask for your new cranks to be included on the side for you to fit.

    Assume you don’t have the quote in writing, so the dropper lever mistake is probably on them (forgot to add to quote?), but if just a verbal agreement you don’t have a lot to come back on.  More of a pain than a crankset to fit, but just order the cheaper one and fit yourself or pay a shop to do it.

    Asking you to pay for the new cranks and keeping the old ones is very cheeky.  If it was a no cost swap out or just a labour change (what’s a crank swap, 15-30 mins tops?) I could sort of understand it.

    FWIW I’ve just ordered a new bike and the shop is swapping the saddle for an alternative at no cost (not sure if I’ll get the old one as well – I’m not expecting to), they are also fitting a set of tyres I’ve given them (and will be getting the ones that came with the bike) plus doing the steerer cut and re-doing the internal hosing before I pick up.

    grizzly
    Free Member

    I have emails discussing the quote:

    “Could I get a quote for this build please?

    Camino Al GRX1

    Fork Camino Al Forks / Carbon Jaffa

    Wheels Sonder Nova 650b Wheelset / UK Build Microspline

    Frame Small / Jaffa

    Handlebar Tape Sonder Reels Black

    Handlebar Sonder Bomber 56cm

    Saddle Sonder Abode Black / 138

    Seatpost Not Required

    Stem Sonder Storc 60mm

    Forks Standard Fork

    Tubes WTB Inner Tube / 700 / 38-45 Black

    Drivechain 10-45t Cassette

    Bottle Cages No Bottle Cages (none)

    Lights No Lights (none)

    Lights Accessories No Bike Light Accessories (none)

    Mudguards No Mudguards (none)

    Pannier No Pannier Rack (none)

    Pedals No Pedals (none)

    GRX 1×12 165mm cranks

    GRX dropper brake lever”

    “Thanks so much for your email.

    As a Ballpark quote it would be around £1449.00 in the current sale.

    Lead times may vary!”

    I’m willing to forget about the dropper lever as it was stated “ballpark” and obviously I’m saving money in the sale and using cycle 2 work but I think they should send the cranks.

    I should’ve just got it for £1299 and swapped the parts and sold the originals and done it myself

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I can’t follow the maths… but a 165mm GRX810 chainset (if that’s what you’re after) is going to cost them full whack right now, if they can source one at all… where as the left over 172.5mm (or any other length) will be hard to shift… so it’s not going to be a cheap swap that one.

    simondbarnes
    Full Member

    Nowhere in your email did you mention cycle to work. They also didn’t give you a definitive quote or lead time. Either pay what they’re now asking or go and bother somebody else.

    grizzly
    Free Member

    Nowhere in your email did you mention cycle to work. They also didn’t give you a definitive quote or lead time. Either pay what they’re now asking or go and bother somebody else.

    That isn’t the only email. There was back and forth as I was checking the changes were possible and I did discuss cycle to work as I know some places have a surcharge or discounts aren’t available

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    Freaky, you’re asking for pretty much the same changes I asked for.

    When I purchased Easter weekend, build estimate was 5 to 20 days, it’s now 3rd May. Apparently some Shimano stuff is out of stock. Welcome to buying a bike, they’re always delayed – I’m not overly worried.

    165mm GRX is only available on the 610, not the 820. These can be picked up for £120, I’m guessing you’ll get half that back selling the old one.

    The bike comes with 610 shifters but the dropper lever is only on the 820 which I believe also have the servowave linkage. In which case, I’d expect both shifters to be swapped as a pair. If they are doing that for £200, that sounds not too far off looking at the difference in retail price.

    Remember, most bolt on drop bar dropper levers at £70+

    Interested to know how this pans out. I’m awaiting a quote for the shifter upgrade but expecting to replace and sell personally.

    niel11
    Free Member

    I wondered why they always have random new parts for sale on their eBay site, it all makes sense now.

    From what you’ve explained it sounds like they’re selling the parts twice (1st to the person who wants a custom build and then via the eBay site), win win for them!

    convert
    Full Member

    I wondered why they always have random new parts for sale on their eBay site, it all makes sense now.

    From what you’ve explained it sounds like they’re selling the parts twice (1st to the person who wants a custom build and then via the eBay site), win win for them!

    I don’t think it works like this with Sonder. When you buy a bike online it doesn’t exist. Or rather it does in components in many parts bins. On order the bike goes into a build queue and will be built up from what the customer ordered. The ‘unused’ longer crank will just stay in the parts bin where it was until the next bike build comes along. It’s not coming off a bike – it’s just never gone on.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    But… if they buy enough chainsets in bulk based on the bikes they expect to build… and then order in a special (and in this case hard to source) part to use instead… then they have a spare chainset, which understandably they’ll shift on as an orphan part.

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    Surely they just order one less of the standard spec on the next batch.

    dartdude
    Free Member

    Take your business elsewhere if stinks.

    convert
    Full Member

    But… if they buy enough chainsets in bulk based on the bikes they expect to build… and then order in a special (and in this case hard to source) part to use instead… then they have a spare chainset, which understandably they’ll shift on as an orphan part.

    They sell the same frame in Sram flavour, Shimano flavour, flat bar, drop bar, hydraulic brakes, mechanical brakes. 4 different colours. Choices of bars and bar tape, seat posts, wheel –  it goes on. Inevitably they will be overstocked in certain options or colourways and need to balance this from time to time . But they are not going to be wringing their hands at a thought of a spare unusable ‘orphan’ chainset knocking about – it way too big and complex an operation for that.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Surely they just order one less of the standard spec on the next batch.

    Who says they’ll buy another batch of the same groupset? Shimano might change the groupset, Sonder’s frame model might change spec, they might decide not to use Shimano for that model at all. Why should they hold onto broken up build kits and wait and see? They could end up with mismatched stuff as the world moves on.

    172.5mm GRX810 chainsets is exactly one of the items we end up with spare at Cotic as well as it happens (you could buy one off us if you’re looking for one). Getting 165mm ad hoc substitutions absolutely part of the service… but they cost, and supply of them is a bit iffy right now… and the spares are best moved on while they are current rather than held on to.

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    Camino being discussed is the new 1×12 610 rather than the 11 speed 810 so not going anywhere soon.

    I was very tempted by the Cascade and one of the appealing aspects was that it was more straightforward to swap bits. However, for what I wanted, it just felt a bit too close to my hardtail.

    chrismac
    Full Member

    But… if they buy enough chainsets in bulk based on the bikes they expect to build… and then order in a special (and in this case hard to source) part to use instead… then they have a spare chainset, which understandably they’ll shift on as an orphan part.

    Isn’t that the commercial risk they take when any company bulk buys to either get to minimum order numbers or discount thresholds? If they don’t want that to happen then don’t offer custom build options.

    highlandman
    Free Member

    Similar questions arose for the purchase of the Mrs’ Camino, delivered a month late in January; we wanted a 165mm crank, so with a risk of further lead in time issues I simply ordered a 38t GRX610 from Germany and swapped it over.  I’ll very likely use the original 40t, 172.5 one day on another bike.

    Unfortunately for Sonder, they built it without the the 10-52 cassette we’d paid extra for but to their credit, that was sent quickly and without any fuss.  It’s a great bike for the job its now doing.

    grizzly
    Free Member

    I’ve now sent an email asking for a standard build but set up tubeless, upgraded saddle and with bottle cages and pedals to make it up closer to my cycle to work voucher (about £15 under).

    Part of me feels like I don’t want to piss them about as I’m sure they are busy and obviously there has been a mix up. I’m also paying less than the bike costs now. But then I also don’t want to pay extra for a bike that I only ordered because it was on sale so hopefully this is a good compromise.

    iainc
    Full Member

    Did you negotiate the deal and then say you’d be paying by C2W rather than card ? If so I think that is the issue, I know that the couple of bricks and mortar shops I use do not do their sale promotion deals on C2W as it costs them substantially more than a card transaction

    Merak
    Full Member

    Id just have ordered it stock and changed the bits myself. I was stroked to the tune of £50 for a Pro dropper lever which coincidentally I fitted to my Camino.

    Should have AliExpress’d it.

    Was reading on LFGSS that cables are now routed into the head tube..

    9e8d43d307833cecb28aae5f0191c3cb93db6dfa

    Aidy
    Free Member

    It’s always baffled me that having your preference of stem length/bar width/crank length on a new bike isn’t just something you get with buying a new bike from a shop without additional cost.

    llama
    Full Member

    Sounds like they made a bit of a mistake on the quote, combined with some bike to work tax.

    You are being unreasonable

    Cost of a bike is never the sum of it’s parts

    sazmtb
    Free Member

    There a shambles and there cock up.cancel and go elsewhere

    plus-one
    Full Member

    I’ve only had great service off sonder. 2 bikes all tickety boo 🙌🏻

    ashhh
    Full Member

    Sonder /alpkit don’t charge for c2w and when I had mine spec’s they were great to deal with. I changed tyres and had a brooks saddle on and only got charged tbe additional (difference). But, don’t assume sonder are selling you the part at rrp. They will have bought most standard kit bulk with associated dicounts and one offs are costly. Also build dates are an estimate. First come first serve and they’ve just had a sale on so the queue will have grown.

    On the positive, I really rate the bike.

    specialisthoprocker
    Free Member

    Lat year I asked for a price on a Camino frame + fork + wheels + headset + stem. The price was about the same as the fully built Camino flat bar version. So i very nearly bought that to sell the bits to help fund my build. But in the end i was tempted by a NP Digger at a knock-down price.

    Still fancy a Camino though…

    nickfrog
    Free Member

    I would cancel the lot on principle if it’s possible as part of the (not) Cycle To Work thing.

    goslow
    Full Member

    I’ve bought 2 Sonder bikes including a Camino in the last couple of years. The Signal came with a 150mm dropper post. I only noticed after I received and used the bike that a 170mm dropper was a no cost option. I asked if I could swap it and they did.

    That doesn’t answer if the OP was unreasonable, I just want to highlight some excellent aftersales service from Alpkit that I didn’t really expect.

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    It’s always baffled me that having your preference of stem length/bar width/crank length on a new bike isn’t just something you get with buying a new bike from a shop without additional cost.

    Having all the various variants of stem/bar/crank length available for fitting on every bike they sell would represent a major cost to the shop though, wouldn’t it?

    Aidy
    Free Member

    Having all the various variants of stem/bar/crank length available for fitting on every bike they sell would represent a major cost to the shop though, wouldn’t it?

    I don’t think it’d be too bad, it’s not like they need to have a full set of options for every single bike they have in the shop. It’s going to take the workshop time to fit anyway, customers will need to come back to collect, so there’s time to order in.

    Wally
    Full Member

    “I’ve bought 2 Sonder bikes including a Camino in the last couple of years. The Signal..”

    I have a doppelganger. Ace bikes, great company IMO, they have answered emails swiftly and always answer the phone within 2 or 3 rings with a knowledgeable person on the end.

    iainc
    Full Member

    “ Sonder /alpkit don’t charge for c2w”

    No, but they would be quite in order not to offer sale deals on it though. This is common practice with many bike shops I understand.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    so there’s time to order in

    Absolutely, and that part will likely cost more.

    Aidy
    Free Member

    Absolutely, and that part will likely cost more.

    Sure. But a fairly small amount more compared with the cost of the brand new bike you’ve just sold, and you get a part back to use on the next build – which might save you an order in the next time.

    From a consumer point of view, I’m also expecting to pay a premium to buy from a bricks and mortar shop – if I’m not getting some fairly minor adjustments for that, then why wouldn’t I spend a fair bit less and buy it online?

    quentyn
    Full Member

    Regarding shops not offering sale bikes on c2w scheme purchases – I had this experience in a specialized concept store. I was told that the 60% off the bike wasn’t applicable as I wanted to use a c2w voucher

    I went elsewhere that did offer c2w on end of season discounts

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