Gym Equipment Repair Service

Stationary Bike Repair in Freehold Township & Surrounding Areas, NJ

Same-day service, certified technicians, all major brands

Same-Day Service
10+ Years Experience
Fully Insured
Upfront Pricing
(551) 553-3822

What Our Customers Say

Real reviews from Google Business Profile

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Arina Kharpak
Feb 2026

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!

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Nj Besc
Jan 2026

Fast, professional, and fair pricing. They had my equipment back in action in no time. Highly recommend.

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Rosemary Leonard
Oct 2025

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.

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Mary Hintz
Nov 2025

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.

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Hazel Russell
Oct 2025

Arthur K is very skilled, professional and courteous. Wonderful technician who represents the company well.

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Jeanette Birli
Jun 2025

Arthur was super professional and friendly; was immediately able to pinpoint the issue and solution. Would definitely recommend!!

The 1980s colonials along Schanck Road and in Freewood Acres have been accumulating finished basement home gyms for three decades — and that concrete-slab humidity shows up fast on stationary bike electronics. A NordicTrack S22i sitting below grade in 07728 will start throwing console errors within a couple of seasons if the basement isn't climate-controlled. Flywheel noise and resistance knobs that stop responding mid-ride are the two calls we field most from this part of Monmouth County. Freehold Township's older split-levels compound the problem: no sump pit, no dehumidifier, and a bike parked against the foundation wall is a recipe for a corroded brake rail by year two.

Freehold Township's housing ranges from 1970s split-levels and ranches near the Freehold Raceway corridor to 1990s colonials off Georgia Road and in the English-style neighborhoods around the Battleground area. Basement floors in those splits sit directly on concrete slab — moisture wicks up and attacks the console wiring harness and the magnetic brake assembly on upright bikes. Zip 07728 sees significantly more console-related failures than towns with stone-foundation basements that actually ventilate. The newer construction near Pond Road fares better, but Peloton Bike+ units in those homes still pull more current than the original circuit plans anticipated — especially on shared bedroom-level breakers where a space heater runs on the same 15-amp line. That combination trips the protection relay on the bike's control board without any actual board failure.

Common Stationary Bike Issues in Freehold Township

Magnetic Resistance Frozen — Humidity Gets Into the Schwinn IC4 Brake Rail

The magnetic resistance mechanism on the Schwinn IC4 and similar belt-drive bikes uses a brake magnet that slides along a rail beside the flywheel. Once basement humidity causes that rail to oxidize, the resistance knob locks at a fixed difficulty level with no warning mid-ride. Replacing the magnetic brake assembly and re-tensioning the adjustment cable usually resolves this in one visit. Below-grade home gyms in 07728 are particularly vulnerable in spring and late summer when Monmouth County humidity spikes. Dehumidifier drainage and a small circulation fan near the bike make a measurable difference between service calls — we'll point out what's practical during the visit.

Flywheel Bearing Noise on NordicTrack and ProForm After Daily Household Use

A rhythmic grinding or clicking during pedaling almost always traces to the main flywheel bearing losing its press-fit. NordicTrack S-series and ProForm Pro bikes run steel flywheels at 30 to 40 pounds — the bearing takes real load. In the Freewood Acres area and neighborhoods near the Freehold Raceway Mall, multi-person households often cycle these bikes two or three times daily, compressing a typical bearing lifespan from five years to closer to two. The replacement bearing on the NordicTrack S22i is a 6205-2RS sealed unit; ProForm uses a slightly different press depth. Getting the spec wrong means the noise returns within 90 days.

Console Dropout on Peloton Bike+ — Old Circuits Can't Handle the Draw

Homes built in the 1970s and early 1980s throughout 07728 commonly run 15-amp circuits that weren't sized for motorized resistance systems pulling 300-plus watts. Console dropout on the Peloton Bike+ and Life Fitness upright units often isn't a failed control board — it's an undervoltage condition tripping the protection relay on a shared circuit. Diagnosing the electrical situation before ordering a replacement control board can save $200 to $400 on a part that was never defective. A quick clamp-meter check on the outlet while the bike runs at full resistance takes five minutes and rules out the expensive fix before any parts are ordered.

Frequently Asked Questions

How fast can you get to Freehold Township for Stationary Bike Repair?

Most 07728 addresses are reachable same-day. Route 9 and Route 33 give direct access into the township with no major mid-day traffic bottlenecks. Residential street parking is straightforward in every neighborhood we've served here — split-level driveways, cul-de-sacs off Georgia Road, townhouse complexes near the Raceway — no issues getting equipment in. Schedule online or call to lock in a morning or afternoon window.

Do you repair Peloton and Schwinn bikes in Freehold Township?

Yes — Peloton Bike and Bike+, Schwinn IC4 and AC Performance, NordicTrack, and ProForm are the four brands we service most often in this area. Common work includes resistance calibration, pedal bearing replacement, console board swaps, and brake rail cleaning. Parts for all four brands ride on the service van. Freehold Township calls also come in for Life Fitness and Sunny Health units — call ahead on those and we'll confirm parts availability before booking.

What does stationary bike repair typically cost in Freehold Township?

Diagnostic service runs $75 to $95. Pedal bearing replacement typically lands between $120 and $180 parts and labor combined. Console board replacements vary by brand — Peloton control boards run considerably higher than ProForm equivalents. Magnetic brake rail service on a Schwinn IC4 usually falls in the $95 to $140 range depending on oxidation severity. Same-day appointments are available most weekdays; schedule online or call to check availability for your address in 07728.

Need Stationary Bike Repair in Freehold Township?

Same-day service available. Call now for a free estimate.

(551) 553-3822
(551) 553-3822
Freehold Township & Nearby Cities Stationary Bike Repair | Same-Day Service | Boost Gym Service