It’s quite hard to diagnose remotely and I’m not entirely sure that What Sami is reporting is clear. It would probably take just a few moments if the bike was presented in front of us so we have to be patient talking him through the test. It would be interesting to know exactly where he is measuring the voltage. Repeatedly Sami keeps saying the voltage goes down but then quotes figures showing it’s going up so I’d be wanting to know how it’s being measured. Just going back to the original problem statement, the power cuts off and cannot be reset without turning the key on and off . So whilst it’s fairly clear that the voltage is collapsing and most likely it’s a duff battery it could also be an intermittent high resistance joint in the cabling between the battery and the controller. The voltage would remain quite high until such time that significant demand was placed on the joint and once the voltage drops the controller will turn itself off . If we believe that the power assistance returns once the key is turned on then maybe only failing when we reach peak demand later. That may go some way towards explaining why the voltage increases when the wheel stops as described above, the load increases, the joint goes HR, the controller turns off and the volts immediately rises due to no load. I don’t know what the key is in the original statement, I wonder if it’s a key switch that turns the battery on and off, if that has been used for 2 1/2 years and perhaps hot switched even that could be a high resistance that clears when you wiggle the switch on and off. All conjecture of course.
Easy if it was in front of us
Easy if it was in front of us