Greetings everyone, I just joined the forum and already starting a question. Hope I’m not to quick asking and I’ll try to keep this short and concise.
I have an old ebike, 36V lead battery, rear hub motor. The wheel doesn’t freewheel at all, it’s hard to move it by hand.
Got it second hand with it’s charger, but no documentation and it has no labels. Perfect Chinese noname I guess.
It used to work, about a year ago, even though I never used it much. Didn’t use it for a lot of time and just decided to start using it a few days ago. Charged the battery and tested: the wheel spins, but slowly. The bike can carry me around, but slowly. I lifted the rear wheel off the ground and saw it’s very hard to spin, with or without the motor cables connected, with our without the battery connected. There’s no difference.
I removed the wheel from the bike and removed the drum brake completely. No difference. The axle is impossible to spin by hand when the wheel is off the bike. I held the axle with pliers and then I can spin the wheel, just as hard to spin as when it’s installed on the bike.
I can ride the bike for 50-100 m in all electric mode, but the bike is very slow compared to what it was, maybe reaching 7-10km/h on flat surface. I don’t want to force it, maybe it’s still repairable.
I measured a few things: the battery voltage around 37-38V when disconnected, drops to 36V when spinning the wheel off the ground. Drops to 33-34V when I force the throttle and the wheel is rubbing the ground. The battery is a bit old, but that’s not the issue for sure.
I have 3 thick wires coming out of the motor. I measured them with the motor unplugged from the controller and they show 0.8 ohm with a Fluke meter. When I turn the wheel by hand there’s some voltage generated between the wires, checked on each pair of two. If I short the 3 motor wires together, the wheel is even harder to spin.
I measured the voltage between phases and saw it raises to aprox 18V between wires with the throttle on max and the wheel spinning off the ground.
I am not sure how to open the motor. I removed the screws holding the lid, but the cover won’t open.
I’m no professional in the field, but I did lots of repairs on normal bikes.
On a normal bike I would diagnose this as being bad bearings, or the bearings being too tightened by the axle nuts. However, this bike ran well before and nobody dismantled it to play with the bearings. Can't tell for sure though if anyone knocked it down and raised it back up, as it's been stored in a share bike room. There’s no weird disintegrated bearing sound.
Maybe someone can give some advice? I’d like to start using the bike for commuting to work and really don’t fancy buying a new one.
Thanks for any tip!
I have an old ebike, 36V lead battery, rear hub motor. The wheel doesn’t freewheel at all, it’s hard to move it by hand.
Got it second hand with it’s charger, but no documentation and it has no labels. Perfect Chinese noname I guess.
It used to work, about a year ago, even though I never used it much. Didn’t use it for a lot of time and just decided to start using it a few days ago. Charged the battery and tested: the wheel spins, but slowly. The bike can carry me around, but slowly. I lifted the rear wheel off the ground and saw it’s very hard to spin, with or without the motor cables connected, with our without the battery connected. There’s no difference.
I removed the wheel from the bike and removed the drum brake completely. No difference. The axle is impossible to spin by hand when the wheel is off the bike. I held the axle with pliers and then I can spin the wheel, just as hard to spin as when it’s installed on the bike.
I can ride the bike for 50-100 m in all electric mode, but the bike is very slow compared to what it was, maybe reaching 7-10km/h on flat surface. I don’t want to force it, maybe it’s still repairable.
I measured a few things: the battery voltage around 37-38V when disconnected, drops to 36V when spinning the wheel off the ground. Drops to 33-34V when I force the throttle and the wheel is rubbing the ground. The battery is a bit old, but that’s not the issue for sure.
I have 3 thick wires coming out of the motor. I measured them with the motor unplugged from the controller and they show 0.8 ohm with a Fluke meter. When I turn the wheel by hand there’s some voltage generated between the wires, checked on each pair of two. If I short the 3 motor wires together, the wheel is even harder to spin.
I measured the voltage between phases and saw it raises to aprox 18V between wires with the throttle on max and the wheel spinning off the ground.
I am not sure how to open the motor. I removed the screws holding the lid, but the cover won’t open.
I’m no professional in the field, but I did lots of repairs on normal bikes.
On a normal bike I would diagnose this as being bad bearings, or the bearings being too tightened by the axle nuts. However, this bike ran well before and nobody dismantled it to play with the bearings. Can't tell for sure though if anyone knocked it down and raised it back up, as it's been stored in a share bike room. There’s no weird disintegrated bearing sound.
Maybe someone can give some advice? I’d like to start using the bike for commuting to work and really don’t fancy buying a new one.
Thanks for any tip!