Have to admit font size makes for more pleasant reading Chris, but what matters is what you are happy with.
Just an update. I've been in touch with EBikes as advised and they have suggested that the cut out issue is possibly due to the sensor ring being out of position? I don't think the displayer dimming will have anything to do with this personally? Anyway, I am intending spending a bit of time on the bike later today, if everything goes to plan, so will post my results. Thanks peepsThe individual brand-name addresses are irrelevant. It's EXACTLY the same company behind all the brands. The telephone number and email address is always the same and has been for years... if you ask Argos for technical support, buy a bike from Ideal World, or buy a Swifty ebike from Swifty on Amazon, it's exactly the same contact details:
support@ebikes.co.uk
01702 208188
Or use their live on-line chat.
Thank you, and good luck sorting the main issue of this thread.I've dropped the font size down so lets see if that helps some?
Yes buddy. My thoughts exactly. I'll check the sensor ring first as a matter of course. making sure no magnets are missing also. I will have to strip everything down for access to the wiring as the connections look like they're enclosed in the controller box at the front of the battery enclosure? At least then I can check the connections, dry them out and apply some electrical contact cleaner. Nothing to loose, except some time.Yes nothing to do with a dimming display, as we have deducted it is a power outage/supply issue which includes shorting between the pcb pads.
Over the years these type of issues have occurred and all tend to lead to moisture affecting the display.
Once any wiring is exposed check the 5v line is reading 5v. Any peripheral part like PAS/throttle one can test with a meter simply using the 5v and gnd wire or via the thin motor hall wires if it is sensored. If any connector is a block type one can push the probes up the back of the wire.
To eliminate that possibility, you could do a load test. What I would use is 3 x 40w 12-volt halogen lamps (the kind used in ceiling downlights) wired in series. That presents a comfortable load of about 4 amps. With your 7Ah battery, it should keep the lamps lit for maybe 1.5 hours - much less shows how worn your battery is.I am beginning to think this is more of a battery issue now?
That seems like a plan? I will have to go and buy some bulbs as I'm 'old fashioned' and only use proper bayonet bulbs in the house. LOL. I was thinking of using some car headlight bulbs for the load test earlier? You're correct about buying second hand and really have to take the sellers trust on what they tell you. Always risky! I have tried to locate a battery for this but haven't had any luck as yet. Also, didn't wish to spend such a great deal of money if the fault lies elsewhere and doesn't cure the problem. Thanks for your comments.To eliminate that possibility, you could do a load test. What I would use is 3 x 40w 12-volt halogen lamps (the kind used in ceiling downlights) wired in series. That presents a comfortable load of about 4 amps. With your 7Ah battery, it should keep the lamps lit for maybe 1.5 hours - much less shows how worn your battery is.
Alternatively, you could open the battery and check individual cells/cell strings to see if any are bad/low.
That's always the trouble with buying secondhand: You never know how knackered the battery really is or how well the previous owner looked after it. Eliminating the battery from the equation would be a good step IMHO.
If you measure the voltage every few minutes during the discharge test, you can plot the time-voltage curve which might tell you even more. Frequent readings in the early and late parts for best results.That seems like a plan? I will have to go and buy some bulbs as I'm 'old fashioned' and only use proper bayonet bulbs in the house. LOL. I was thinking of using some car headlight bulbs for the load test earlier? You're correct about buying second hand and really have to take the sellers trust on what they tell you. Always risky! I have tried to locate a battery for this but haven't had any luck as yet. Also, didn't wish to spend such a great deal of money if the fault lies elsewhere and doesn't cure the problem. Thanks for your comments.