What about the blue wire? From what you've said, somethings not right. There should be a connector from the motor with red, black, blue, yellow and green wires. You measure the blue, yellow and green ones. Did you turn the wheel backwards?Ok I checked as you said
I assume with power on?
Yellow 1.8v no movement
Green 1.8v no movement
Red 4.3v no movement
The Red and Yellow have double wires into the connector from I think speed signal?
There is an empty hole in the socket but the other side to the hub has a White wire.
Thanks Ken
yes did turn it backwards very slow.What about the blue wire? From what you've said, somethings not right. There should be a connector from the motor with red, black, blue, yellow and green wires. You measure the blue, yellow and green ones. Did you turn the wheel backwards?
It's possible that your sensors are not working. That would explain why your controller might be working in sensorless mode. We need to be sure about whether they work or not before we can choose the route to a solution. That's why the test results need to be definitive.yes did turn it backwards very slow.
Did you mean the Thick wires or the thin ones going to the hub?
I will double check snd make sure I checked the blue
thanks Ken
OK. That's bad. If you had any other controller it probably wouldn't work at all. I'm pretty sure that the self-learning detected nothing happening with the halls, so hswitched to sensorless mode.Ok
I have checked again. Have a video but unable to upload to here.,
Black Probe in Black
Red in Blue = 5.06v and no movement when turning wheel backwards very slow
Red in Green 1.79v no movement
Red in Yellow 1.80v no movement
Thanks
Yes. It.ll be fine as long as you help it to start, but always noisier than with sensors. It's not too difficult to replace the halls and they only cost pence, so if you find that what you have becomes intolerable, you can open the motor to see what's wrong and replace the halls if necessary.The bike was very old but a very nice light alloy folding bike with good suspension.
I have removed all of the old stuff
Fitted a new type battery
What was supposed to be a good drive wheel for the rear instead of the front And fitted the old rear wheel to the front.
A complete kit inc
controller
PAS
Display
throttle
levers
It was maybe not worth it but the bike is so light and good to ride and I am trying to learn about these bit by bit.
So looking like the Rear Hub ?
Thanks
Yes using the cycle power only.Yes. It.ll be fine as long as you help it to start, but always noisier than with sensors. It's not too difficult to replace the halls and they only cost pence, so if you find that what you have becomes intolerable, you can open the motor to see what's wrong and replace the halls if necessary.
One other important thing. Hall sensors need either a pull-up or pull-down resistor to make them switch. Some motors have a pcb to hold the halls and the resistor, others have no resistor. There should be such a resistor in the controller, but I don't think all controllers have them.
Can you confirm that you did the above test while connected and powered by the controller, not from an external source?
Yes using the cycle power only.
I have had a Hub apart before to fit new gears.
would I be able to buy the Hall Sensors easy enough?
Thanks for your guidance doing this. Enjoying learning.
Ken
Just to updateYes. It.ll be fine as long as you help it to start, but always noisier than with sensors. It's not too difficult to replace the halls and they only cost pence, so if you find that what you have becomes intolerable, you can open the motor to see what's wrong and replace the halls if necessary.
One other important thing. Hall sensors need either a pull-up or pull-down resistor to make them switch. Some motors have a pcb to hold the halls and the resistor, others have no resistor. There should be such a resistor in the controller, but I don't think all controllers have them.
Can you confirm that you did the above test while connected and powered by the controller, not from an external source?
You could try adding the resistor. You can use any one in the range 5k to 10k. You can shove its legs up the back of the tester connector - one leg on the 5v wire and the other on any of the hall signal wires to see if it starts switching. If it doesn't, try one leg up the ground wire and the other on a hall signal wire. Don't forget to turn the wheel backwards, not forwards.Just to update
I bought the tester that available and it shows nothing from the Hall Sensors at all So it confirms your diagnosi.
I will remove the wheel when I have more time.
I notice even with that plug disconnected the motor still works
Thanks Ken