You need a bit of motor cable with the female pins in the connector to connect to the motor and flying leads on the other end.
Test for a short to the case:
With your meter set to continuity, put one probe on the motor case, then probe each wire to make sure there is no connection.
Motor phase wires:
Take each pair at a time (3 tests).Set your meter to Volts A/C
, connect your probes to any pair, then spin the wheel backwards to see the generation. Each pair should generate the same voltage at the same speed.
Hall sensors:
You need a 5v source. Use three AA batteries or any 5v charger you can find. Connect the plus to the red wire and the minus to the black. Set your meter to 20v D/C scale, put the black probe on the black wire and measure the voltage between each of the thin yellow, green and blue wires while you turn the wheel slowly backwards.Tou should see the 5v switching on and off several times with each rotation.
If it passes those three tests, there is nothing wrong with it unless there is an intermittent connection, but you should still see that in the tests.
Hi Saneagle,
Apologies for the delay and thanks for taking an interest. I have now attempted the tests you recommended, repeated to ensure consistency.
Short to case
There was no continuity between any of the nine motor lead terminals and either the motor case or the axle.
Motor phase wires
Back emf generation - increasing with speed, consistent between all three phases.
Hall sensors
The motor is not built into a wheel and so the axle was held in a vice. Due to the internal gearing it was very difficult to spin the motor slowly and precisely. It wanted to sit in specific "detent" positions, presumably magnetic and representing the individual motor poles. The individual "detent" positions are close together, so no scope for precision with the rotor position.
As best I could determine:
White: Off (0V) for a small part of the hub revolution (2 poles) and 5V for the rest of the hub revolution. Presumably this is the wheel speed sensor. This sensor behaves differently to the phase sensors.
Yellow, green, blue: The phase sensors appeared to switch frequently as the hub rotated, however voltage readings could only be obtained at the specific "detent" (magnetic?) positions. I removed the motor from the hub casing so I could rotate the rotor more precisely without the gearing interfering. I detected off voltages of 0V on all phases. On voltages were about 0.7 - 0.8V on one phase, 0.5 - 0.6V on another and around 0.3 - 0.4V on the third. These were the same as measured before removing the hub casing.
Surely all three (four including the white wheel speed one) sensors should behave the same way?
I tried wiggling the motor lead where it enters the axle, and also the 9pin connector. No difference.
Just to recap: In the OP I mentioned that this new motor had been surging and after sending a video Yose Power supplied a replacement, which cured the problem.
Sorry, Pedelecs won't let me attach .mov or .mp4 files, not even 8MB. I now want to recover the "faulty" motor, if reasonably possible.
In the bike stand the motor runs smoothly up to maximum speed in each assist level but this maximum speed then keeps varying rhythmically, frequency once or twice a second, as though it is hunting for the right speed. It's fairly noisy when doing this but quiet otherwise. It sounds as though the power is being varied significantly. This surging happens in all assist levels, more pronounced and noisier in higher ones.
Btw, the controller appears to be JYT brand according to Yose Power web site but is unbranded inside and out. It's marked model YCSH-D. The web site claims it is a sine wave controller.
My guess, FWIW but probably a LoB!:
Perhaps the Halls are sending duff/inconsistent/badly timed messages to the controller, which then cannot apply the correct amount of current to each phase at the right timing. So, when running at full speed in the bike stand, perhaps the motor ends up going from near full power to nothing according to the speed sensor, over and over again? I.e. the ramping off of current as the speed limit approaches has become pretty much on/off, on/off... with no fine control of current in between, and not balanced between phases?
If the controller is sending different and erratic amounts of current to each phase, might this account for the noise?
Any thoughts or ideas?
Thanks again Saneagle, your help is invaluable and really appreciated.