But I greased the big gear area, secondary reduction gear. Have never opened the motor/controller before. First time this.I guess as you filled it with grease initially you didnt reseal the motor properly.
My 18a controller started to fail at 1647miles about 30 miles from home in the amongst the woods in Surrey Hills, it was intermittent but managed to get nearer home before complete failure and rode the rest unassisted.Hello.
I have a Bafang BBS02 350W I was wondering what is the, average, expected lifetime of this motor, does anyone know?
How many miles/KMs before it might explode or fail
What is the most common failure? Drop in power or speed in reaction or?
yes, they all have oil seal now, even the copies.I've only ever stripped down the early version BBS which had a silicon washer that went behind the lock nut on BB. Rubbish attempt at waterproofing and they were always mangled on removal and completely impossible to refit. Used lots of grease as a replacement. The B version is meant to be improved, is there an oil seal in there now? I know the HD has one.
Well that's an improvement over the silicon washer setup. I guess all you can do is pack plenty of grease behind it as people do on their Bosch drives, but never gonna be 100% watertight.yes, they all have oil seal now, even the copies.
Not ideal, but I pack mine with grease. During periodic maintenance, I've noticed there's no rust on the axle, which hopefully means water is not getting in.does anyone have any idea how to stop water getting in through the bottom bracket?
didn't you mean outside the seal? you can replace the grease if it gets washed away, the seal keeps the sludge out of the motor.Well that's an improvement over the silicon washer setup. I guess all you can do is pack plenty of grease behind it as people do on their Bosch drives, but never gonna be 100% watertight.
Sorry Woosh, yes, i meant both sides. Possibly think about replacing the seal at service intervals. If it's an available common size, should only cost a few quid. Maybe someone could size it up next time they do a strip down.didn't you mean outside the sea
16x25 metricSorry Woosh, yes, i meant both sides. Possibly think about replacing the seal at service intervals. If it's an available common size, should only cost a few quid. Maybe someone could size it up next time they do a strip down.
Top man, I'll add it to the BBS** parts thread.16x25 metric
I've read these are a big of a bugger to remove. Is that the case, or has anyone managed to remove one without damaging the seal?
I use one of these:I've read these are a big of a bugger to remove. Is that the case, or has anyone managed to remove one without damaging the seal?
Interesting looking motor, 2.7 kg? Is that a 104 BCD?As I am looking into selling the Gospade mid motor, Gospade sent me some pictures of the oil seals on the drive side of their motor. The cog held by the fingers is external and drives the chainring.
You see the care taken to avoid water ingress better on this picture of the chainring driver:
Bosch should watch out, the Chinese are catching up.
yes, but I guess it's easy for Gospade to use the more popular 5 bolt 130 BCD like the Tongsheng TSDZ2.Interesting looking motor, 2.7 kg? Is that a 104 BCD?