Years ago I bought a second hand e-bike in pretty bad mechanical condition for dirt cheap. I did all the repairs and it's been running mostly fine all this time, except for intermittent waterproofing issues, specially during the winter. Unfortunately a few weeks ago the LED display finally died due to corrosion from rain water and it was impossible to find the same model anymore (brand-less, old electronics) so I decided to purchase a new controller and LED display. I found on Amazon a cheapish 250W 24V LED display + controller pack similar to the old one, but allegedly waterproof.
For context it was my first time doing this sort of thing but the task seemed easy. Connected everything together, battery, PAS sensor, brake sensors, phase lines and hall sensors (only had to cut and solder a few connectors that wouldn't match, like the one for the hall sensors) and that was it. With the bike still upside down everything appeared to be working properly. However... once tested on the ground it's evident that things weren't gonna be so easy.
The bike 'works', but every time you start pedaling from a standstill the hub motor makes a loud sort of squealing noise for a few seconds until it gains some speed, then it operates normally. If I apply very little power to the pedals to force the hub motor to do all the work, or start the pedaling on a slope, sometimes the hub motor seems to stall entirely with an even louder but shorter tone, and then once the bike has some speed it operates again. A video is probably better than a thousand words, so here you have two:
(on this one you can see the stalling at the very beginning)
I'm not an expert, hence why I'd like to ask for your opinions, but my theory is that the hub motor is not getting enough current to function normally. In fact this issue doesn't show up on the assistance level 1 (lowest) but it does on level 2 and specially so on level 3, i.e. when more power is demanded from the hub motor.
What I've done so far:
For additional context, here's a pic of the old and the new controller.
For context it was my first time doing this sort of thing but the task seemed easy. Connected everything together, battery, PAS sensor, brake sensors, phase lines and hall sensors (only had to cut and solder a few connectors that wouldn't match, like the one for the hall sensors) and that was it. With the bike still upside down everything appeared to be working properly. However... once tested on the ground it's evident that things weren't gonna be so easy.
The bike 'works', but every time you start pedaling from a standstill the hub motor makes a loud sort of squealing noise for a few seconds until it gains some speed, then it operates normally. If I apply very little power to the pedals to force the hub motor to do all the work, or start the pedaling on a slope, sometimes the hub motor seems to stall entirely with an even louder but shorter tone, and then once the bike has some speed it operates again. A video is probably better than a thousand words, so here you have two:
I'm not an expert, hence why I'd like to ask for your opinions, but my theory is that the hub motor is not getting enough current to function normally. In fact this issue doesn't show up on the assistance level 1 (lowest) but it does on level 2 and specially so on level 3, i.e. when more power is demanded from the hub motor.
What I've done so far:
- Checked all the wires that supply electricity, from the battery to the controller and the 3 phase lines, but I couldn't find any evidence of a bad connection. Before I did the controller switch some of those connectors were slightly dirty and/or rusty and I used a fine file on them to get them to shine again.
- I've tried the self-calibration wire several times but the outcomes seem limited to 2 states: if I plug them to each other once the hub motor makes a noise as if it was spinning but the wheel doesn't move, and when I unplug and replug it again the wheel spins correctly. That's it.
- I've tried running with the hall sensors unplugged and the issue persists. I'd say it's somewhat worse even (the stalling happens more often) in sensorless mode.
- Contacted the Chinese vendor over Amazon to ask for help but besides offering a partial refund they have not been any helpful.
For additional context, here's a pic of the old and the new controller.