If you try to connect any Hailong type battery to its receiver when it's switched on, the current rushing into the controller's capacitors will burn the connectors. The round type are very thin. so burning is serious. The inrush current can even weld the two connectors together.I am back at last.
I've been busy, and at one point even sick in bed for a week and a half these past few months. But all is well now.
The bike is seemingly working again, after, I think of 2 months down time of me trying to troubleshoot what the issue was.
I must state that both Yose Power and Greenlance were excellent in terms of customer service with me, lightning fast communication and attentiveness.
After a lot of struggle I managed with wriggle the battery off the bike, it took many attempts along the course of a few weeks and a eureka moment of me flipping the thing upside down and trying to gently yet with force to remove it, and it worked.
And as I did, I immediately saw that one of the connectors of the battery cradle/mounting plate was damaged.
I then quickly got in contact with Greenlance and within an hour they got back to me to send the battery back so they could replace the 5 round gold pin connectors with the 4 straight pin style connectors - those look way more robust to me.
But that was only last week, I've since then tested the bike 4 times with quick 10 minute rides the past few days and it seems everything is working like normal.
Fingers crossed it stays that way, the bike had worked flawlessly prior to this issue.
I will admit, if I were more experienced with e-bikes I would probably have found what the issue was much earlier. It took weeks for me to realise the battery was stuck to the cradle - and that that was at least a hint to what the problem could be.
But you live and learn, that's life.
P.S.
I hope this post serves to help a future someone who ever has a similar issue.
Sounds like a faulty battery. If I had to guess, I'd say one or more welds have let go, or possibly a bad solder joint on a sense wire. See if you can measure any voltage in the charge socket, but be careful not to short your probes if it's the 5.5mm jack type.Talk about rotten luck. Need advice please.
More trouble this morning.
I was going to take the bike for another test drive just this morning, right away I noticed the bike wouldn't turn on.
I tested the battery light indicators (the ones on the battery itself) and pressed the button, blank. No lights would come on, not even the red ones.
Which is odd since I charged the battery to completion when I last used it, Sunday - it had come from the repair shop with about 38v or 39v. It had charged to 41.5v. Which was a number I'd never seen on this battery before, the most I saw was 41.4v back then.
I plugged the charger in and it was behaving strangely. The red and green light would alternate every 4 seconds or so. The charger's fan also went on and off accordingly. I made a point to take a video of it for reference.
I unplugged the charger, and the battery lights indicated full (all the way to the last green light). The charger was plugged in for about a minute and a half.
The bike turned on, I then proceeded to take it for a test ride and after half a block the bike turned itself off. The display went blank.
I pressed the button on the battery to see the indicator lights and no light would come on, again not even the red ones.
I never had this problem before, the battery always held charge, even in the months the bike was faulty. The lights always worked and the voltage remained consistent.
So this is a new issue.
This thing cost me £299. I wonder if I should straight up ask for a refund, because I am very very frustrated.