I thought it tidier to start a fresh thread, as my first post was full of my random guesses, and some very useful advice from Alan, Neal and D8ve in response to my random guesses.
Following some more research/investigations, and a few hours of fiddling yesterday, I can add a few more facts which will hopefully be helpful in diagnosing the issue.
I've uploaded a short video of the symptoms to Youtube, link = https://youtu.be/fqnNW_izFBk
Basically, regardless of what I try, measure, connect, disconnect, the motor cuts in for one or two secs, the cuts out for ten secs, the cuts in for one-two secs etc etc.
The DVM in the vid shows PCB-level DC voltage - interestingly you can see that something is still applying a load to the DC/battery supply even when the motor is not spinning, which implies that the controller is trying to turn the motor.
I'm a (mechanical) engineer, hence I'm keen to understand the system (and the 'fault' rather than just spend money on new controller, now motor, or new battery at this stage)
Summary of the facts (now that I've followed the advice of the knowledgeable people and actually checked things), in no particular order:
So my main question for now is – is the fork sensor used to control motor operation? I.e. have Cytronex invented their own external hall-effect sensor system, in conjunction with the original sensorless motor/controller?
If so then I’ll continue trying to set that up correctly through trial-and-error angular position.
If not, then is the controller, motor, or battery fried…?
Thanks in advance as always!
Adam
Following some more research/investigations, and a few hours of fiddling yesterday, I can add a few more facts which will hopefully be helpful in diagnosing the issue.
I've uploaded a short video of the symptoms to Youtube, link = https://youtu.be/fqnNW_izFBk
Basically, regardless of what I try, measure, connect, disconnect, the motor cuts in for one or two secs, the cuts out for ten secs, the cuts in for one-two secs etc etc.
The DVM in the vid shows PCB-level DC voltage - interestingly you can see that something is still applying a load to the DC/battery supply even when the motor is not spinning, which implies that the controller is trying to turn the motor.
I'm a (mechanical) engineer, hence I'm keen to understand the system (and the 'fault' rather than just spend money on new controller, now motor, or new battery at this stage)
Summary of the facts (now that I've followed the advice of the knowledgeable people and actually checked things), in no particular order:
- I've now removed the wiring from the plastic trunking as it was hard to see what was connected, plus I want to turn this into a front-mounted, quick remove system so will tidy the wiring and rebag.
- I've carefully removed all of the silicone sealant that had been enthusiastically used to seal the wiring into the controller, and removed the PCB intact from the casing
- During tests I've measured the DC voltage of the NiMh battery - after sitting fully charged for a night, voltage measured at the external wiring was around 50V at no load, and 46V when the motor span. This seemed high for a 36V system - no load voltage on the mains chargers was >50V. After a few tests of the motor, DC voltage (now being measured at the PCB as per video was 36V at no load, dropping to ~32V when the motor kicks in. (And still bouncing even when the motor stops for ten seconds). So I don't seem to be hitting the 30V min voltage safety cutoff, but LSDZS/Lishui state that they use a 'soft' ramp-down when voltage drops towards min threshold, so maybe this is what's happening. Voltage does seem to drop significantly considering there is very little load with the bike off the ground - hopefully this does not mean that the battery is dying...?
- There is one red LED on the controller, which flashes continually on/off about once-per-second whenever the battery is connected, and this sequence never varies or stops
- I couldn't find any info online using the product IDs on the controller sticker, but the PCB is marked 'www.lsdzs.com' and their website shows at least one controller (LD-LS01-F..) that looks similar, but no user guides. There are a series of articles in the Services section that describe controller operation principles.
- I also can't find any details of the 'Outrider 180W 175rpm' hub motor online, but according to various posts, both the motor and controller are from 'Tongxin'.
- The motor is sensorless - i.e. it only has 3-pins in the connector.
- But there are three magnets glued to one end face of the hub, opposite side to the disk brake
- These magnets were sensed by a black 'hall effect' - i.e. a plastic cased, 3-wire sensor, that looks like a PAS sensor, but in a black case. I have had to tape this to the (suspension) forks ends on the new bike, as the original bracket was designed to mount on mud-guard fixings, which these forks don't have. The sensor is at most 1mm from the magnets as they rotate past.
- I still can't figure out what these magnets are for - as far as I know, a sensorless controller measures phase back-EMF to determine rotor position, it does not require an additional sensor inputs.
- However, I believe that sensorless motors cannot normally start from standstill, they need rotation and back-EMF to determine rotor position, whereas this system will spin-up from standstill, as per video
- If the three external hub magnets ARE used for motor control, then in theory the position of the black sensor needs to be set accurately, as otherwise the controller does not know where the sensor is relative to the axle/stator installation angle, as this varies with the angle of whichever fork is fitted, and therefore the original backet must be designed for the original Charge forks?
- Measuring signal voltage on the PAS, I saw (with my cheap DVM), the signal rise to ~4.6V whenever a magnet passed as I span the cranks
- The original black fork sensor did not show any measurable response to hub magnets passing, and the new sensor I bought and tried yesterday (which is actually a read-cased PAS sensor, but the only type I could buy), only registers a ~0.5V rise in signal when a magnet passes (with sensor <1mm from magnet) therefore possibly the new sensor is also faulty, or the circuit is faulty
- Regardless of what I try/connect/disconnect etc, the effects are always the same – as per video I just get intermittent hub rotation.
- I can’t test any of this on a rolling bike yet, as none of the brackets for the sensors fit my bike
- I did speak to Gibbs at Cytronx yesterday, but although he was helpful, he was not able to tell me much as the system set up is proprietary, and part of their business is the custom installation of kits so understandably he doesn’t want to give away their secrets.
So my main question for now is – is the fork sensor used to control motor operation? I.e. have Cytronex invented their own external hall-effect sensor system, in conjunction with the original sensorless motor/controller?
If so then I’ll continue trying to set that up correctly through trial-and-error angular position.
If not, then is the controller, motor, or battery fried…?
Thanks in advance as always!
Adam