
Stationary Bike Repair in Cliffside Park & Surrounding Areas, NJ
Same-day service, certified technicians, all major brands

Brands We Service
Our certified technicians are trained to repair equipment from all major brands
After moving to new house my treadmill stopped working, I called Boost Gym Service and Igor came the next day to repair it. He did everything super fast and professionally, explained how I can do maintenance by myself and gave useful tips. The price was fair. Thank you so much, will definitely use the service again. Highly recommend in Palisades Park!
Fast, professional, and fair pricing. They had my equipment back in action in no time. Highly recommend.
Arthur came and looked at my Treadmill found the issue, and said it needed maintenance, which I knew it did, I asked if he could do it, his office called me back with a total price. Arthur did the maintenance and showed me what he did, the Machine looked like new, he was very pleasant, and would certainly reach out to him again.
Arthur was fantastic. He arrived and let us know the problems we had with the treadmill and showed me each part that needed repair. In the end, we decided not to repair our treadmill, but it was a good experience working with this company.
Arthur K is very skilled, professional and courteous. Wonderful technician who represents the company well.
Arthur was super professional and friendly; was immediately able to pinpoint the issue and solution. Would definitely recommend!!
Palisade Avenue cuts through one of the most densely packed zip codes in Bergen County — 07010 — where Peloton Bike+ units share 750-square-foot apartments with standing desks and fold-out dining tables. Building gyms in the high-rises above Hudson Terrace run Keiser M3i bikes without any maintenance contract in place. Tight apartments mean bikes get repositioned constantly, and that movement breaks things that stationary use in a dedicated home gym never would.
Most of Cliffside Park's housing stock is pre-war and early 1970s multi-family — six-story brick walkups and high-rises along Anderson Avenue with compact resident fitness rooms. The 07010 zip sees a specific pattern: bikes crammed into small bedrooms or building gyms that were converted from storage space, sharing circuits with HVAC units. Older electrical panels in the pre-war buildings trip breakers on motorized resistance systems. The Hudson-facing side also sees humidity that works into flywheel housings and console ports faster than landlocked suburbs.
Common Stationary Bike Issues in Cliffside Park
Flywheel Bearing Noise After Elevator Moves and Tight-Space Repositioning
Residents in Cliffside Park's high-rises relocate bikes more than homeowners do — elevators, hallways, apartment corners. Each tilt and drag puts lateral stress on the flywheel bearing assembly. On a Peloton Bike+, the sealed cartridge bearing behind the flywheel picks up side-load damage that shows up as a grinding tick at mid to high resistance settings. Replacing the flywheel bearing cartridge clears it. Ignoring it long enough and the flywheel itself needs truing.
Resistance Knob Seizure on Building Gym Keiser M3i Units
The M3i bikes in Cliffside Park's building fitness rooms handle a lot of riders in short windows — morning rushes before the 6:45 PATH commute, evening clusters after 7pm. The resistance adjustment cable that connects the dial to the magnetic brake pad bracket frays at the pivot point under that kind of repetitive use. Once it frays, the knob stops turning smoothly or freezes entirely at one resistance setting. Cable and cam replacement, not lubrication, is the fix.
NordicTrack S22i Console Failure on Shared Apartment Circuits
NordicTrack's S22i console is sensitive to voltage inconsistency. In Cliffside Park's older apartment buildings, shared circuits drop briefly when elevators engage or HVAC units cycle — enough to corrupt the console's firmware state or damage the capacitor array on the main control board. The touchscreen freezes mid-ride, or the iFit login loop won't resolve. A board swap and firmware reflash gets it running. Power conditioning on the outlet prevents the next failure.
Frequently Asked Questions
How fast can you get to Cliffside Park for Stationary Bike Repair?▼
Cliffside Park is a straight shot up Route 9W from our Bergen County coverage area — same-day appointments are usually available. Parking on Gorge Road or Anderson Avenue is tight; we come in a compact van. Schedule online to lock in a window that fits your building's elevator access hours.
Do you repair Peloton and Keiser bikes in Cliffside Park?▼
Yes — Peloton Bike and Bike+ are the most common calls in 07010, followed by Keiser M3i in building gyms and NordicTrack S22i in home setups. We carry pedal bearing kits, seat post hardware, flywheel belts, and console boards for all three. Schwinn IC4 and IC8 work we handle regularly too.
What does a stationary bike repair typically cost in Cliffside Park?▼
Diagnostic is flat-rate. Pedal bearing and seat post clamp jobs usually run $90–$150 in parts and labor. Flywheel bearing replacement on a Peloton Bike+ averages $160. Console board swaps on NordicTrack range $130–$200 depending on parts availability. Same-day service is available — schedule online to check current slots.
Need Stationary Bike Repair in Cliffside Park?
Same-day service available. Call now for a free estimate.
(551) 553-3822



















