
Stationary Bike Repair in Summit & 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
Stationary Bike Repair in Nearby Cities
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!!
Victorian-era houses along Hobart Avenue and Morris Avenue in 07901 weren't designed for dedicated gym rooms — but that hasn't stopped Summit homeowners from putting Peloton Bike+ units and Technogym Rides into third bedrooms and converted dens. Older plaster construction holds humidity longer than modern builds, and that moisture works its way into flywheel bearings faster than most people expect. The Reeves-Reed Arboretum sits two blocks from homes that easily run $1.5M — the equipment inside matches that price point.
Most of Summit's residential grid in 07901 — from the colonials near the NJ Transit station to the larger Tudors up toward Morris County line — dates between 1895 and 1955. Pre-war homes here often have 15-amp circuits in rooms that now run motorized resistance systems. A Life Fitness IC8 pulling 200 watts alongside a space heater trips breakers and stresses console power regulators. Finished basements near Springfield Avenue handle humidity seasonally, which accelerates bottom bracket corrosion on any bike parked there year-round.
Common Stationary Bike Issues in Summit
Flywheel Bearing Noise from Basement Humidity
Summit basements in pre-1950 homes hold moisture from June through September. That humidity corrodes the flywheel bearing race on Peloton Bike+ and Echelon EX-8s units faster than the spec sheet suggests. It starts as a faint tick at resistance level 30+, then turns into a grinding that carries through the floor. Catch the bearing early or the flywheel spindle threads strip out — then it's a far bigger repair.
Resistance Knob Seized or Spinning Free
Magnetic resistance systems on Technogym and NordicTrack S22i bikes use a tension cable threaded through an adjuster housing to move the magnetic brake pad. When that cable frays — or the adjuster seizes after sitting unused for a few months — the knob either locks up or spins with zero response. Summit calls spike in January when bikes come out of summer storage. The cable and adjuster mechanism are stock parts; the fix itself runs under an hour.
Console Malfunction After a Power Surge
The older grid sections near Morris Avenue can push voltage spikes during peak summer AC load. Peloton Bike+ and Life Fitness console boards don't handle unprotected surges well — the display goes dark, throws an E6 error, or stops reading cadence data from the speed sensor entirely. A $15 surge protector prevents it going forward. For a board that's already gone, it needs a direct replacement or a firmware reflash depending on the fault code.
Frequently Asked Questions
How fast can you get to Summit for stationary bike repair?▼
Summit is 35-45 minutes via Route 78 or 24 from our base. Street parking is straightforward in most residential areas near the train station and Hobart Avenue. Call (908) 312-7744 or book online — same-day slots are available most weekdays before noon.
Do you fix Peloton and Technogym bikes in Summit?▼
Both are regular calls here. Peloton Bike and Bike+ most often need resistance unit replacement, pedal crank bearing work, or console board service. Technogym Ride repairs are less frequent but we stock the key components. Also handle Life Fitness, NordicTrack, and Echelon models.
What does stationary bike repair typically cost in Summit?▼
Diagnostic visit is $85. Most repairs — flywheel bearing swap, resistance cable replacement, pedal bearing press — run $130-$260 parts and labor. Console replacements vary by brand, usually $180-$350. Call before noon for same-day afternoon availability.
Need Stationary Bike Repair in Summit?
Same-day service available. Call now for a free estimate.
(551) 553-3822



















