Thank you. Unless some intrepid soul on this forum tries this first, I will, if I ever convert using a hub motor kit. Can you recall which controllers? Were they current controlled or the crappier speed controlled?You could adapt many by sticking reverse polarity magnets beween the normal ones, then you'd get the correct signal whichever way you pedalled unless you had a dual hall sensor. Alternatively, in a 10 magnet disc, you could try pressing out and reversing every other magnet so that you have alternating N and S.
Thanks for answering my question. When stopped by the rozzers, simply switch off the PAS senor? Could claim the bike had broken down shortly before - who knows, you might be believed if you weren't bombing down the road? Or switch to the second PAS disc on the opposite side, which has magnets oriented for forward pedal assist? Or fashion some mechanism which can swiftly click one set of magnets too far away and bring the other set closer, or flip the required magnets over with a sneaky kick of a heel? If caught somehow, surely backpedalling pedal assist is less illegal than an independently operating throttle faster than 6kph? Can they throw the book at you for operating a motorbike without insurance etc, if all you have is a backpedal activated EAPC? Would it be more of a pamphlet? A pamphlet wouldn't hurt as much.There was a specific requirement under the 2009 EN15194 standard which I assume probably still applies that pedaling backwards will not activate the motor as below.
View attachment 60175
Might not be too bad? Start with ebrake+brakes on, pedal backwards to activate the motor, having let go of brakes a split second before... then continue pedalling backwards temporarily, until you're travelling forward fast enough to easily pedal forwards? Could end up rolling downhill of course once the ebrakes are let go, if there's a huge preset pause between ebrake and the start of pedal assist.When the motor activates by pedalling backwards, it's a bit dodgy because you have to lift the pedal to get ready to ride. That's going to be a bit awkward when the bike surges forward each time you attempt to move the pedals. It would require a bit more sophistication in the control system to make sure that it didn't go when you didn't want it to. Also, pedalling backwards to start up a hill is going to be a nightmare.
Replacing the internal logic is something I hope to avoid.If the cadence sensor has just the three wires, then my guess is that there are two Hall effect sensors, which produce a quadrature signal as the pedals turn, and there is a little bit of internal logic which gates one of the quadrature waveforms with the derived direction signal, so there's no pulse train output when pedalling in reverse.
Last edited: