Hello everyone,
I am really enjoying reading and learning about e-bikes from these forums. I certainly feel that I could buy any kit and do it myself now including building a battery pack thanks to some really great posted video's from here on how to safely do this. I already maintain my own bikes so have most of the specific bike tools and do fix electronics at the component level so not afraid of a multi meter and a soldering iron. I am a retired systems programmer by trade.
My wife received her swytch kit a few weeks ago after 7 months waiting for it. It worked perfectly for 1 and 1/2 rides (approx 18 miles). She has been working with Swytch over the past 10 days to find resolution and I am not sure I buy their conclusion as I see multiple unexplained failure modes. They will ship a new handle bar battery pack assembly (see picture) but don't have it in stock and then it will be 2-4 weeks after that. We are in Victoria, BC Canada so double that time it always feels like. ;--) The problem I have is that her bike was on its kickstand for about 30-45 seconds with her off of the bike and behind it. The front wheel motor suddenly lurched forward throws the bike on the ground with enough force (wrestling pile driver comes to mind) to skew her handbars sideways. We were discussing the motor cutting in/out so I witnessed this first hand. Prior to that we saw this behavior when moving the crank by hand with no result only to see it happen 10-15 seconds later or during coasting at times when she is on it. Normally there is a small delay about 1-2 seconds which is normal for this controller which she likes.
The other symptoms are that she isn't able to keep the motor running for more than 5 mins with the average about 10-20 seconds as the motor cuts off. Sometimes it cuts back in fairly soon which is ok but a lot of time she can't get it to start again for minutes. The only thing that is reliable is that the motor will only operate when you don't need it. ;-) ;-) That means almost never completely up a hill. It works almost always down hill but can fail there too. I estimate her cadence is around 50-60 but I have tested her PAS by turning the peddle with my hand and observed the sensor picking each and every pass of the magnets. Another odd thing which we only saw once was a fully charged battery mysteriously lost 2 bars of charge in 1.5 miles on flat roads??? Fortunately, we ride mostly flat roads or 1-2 degrees gradients here and bought the swytch so she could ride with me. She loves her bike and was hesitant to go electric so it seemed like a good solution and now is hooked on the concept of a front wheel hub motor. I am not sold on her kit but her small hub motor is more than good enough for her style of riding. She never has it past assist level 1. We generally go about 22 miles per ride so her swytch eco kit could be perfect if it would function as advertised.
I have completely done and redone the PAS. I have strapped her battery + controller + BMS + display in that swytch bag so that there is no vertical play with the handle bar connector. I have cleaned the contacts. I have reset the battery pack and re-inserted it into the connector after it begins to fail and she still can't get the hub motor to engage at times. We will pull over, I will verify the PAS and then pull and re-insert the battery+controller+etc and off we go. Motor will not engage at times even after that doing that. We get better results during the first 1-2 miles of our ride where it works more often than it doesn't but can still cut out. The longer she rides during the trip, the more frequent the motor cutting in/out she says.
She has also experienced what felt like riding over a washboard as the front hub motor/wheel started to vibrate is the best way to describe it. It only happened once (very short duration) and we have probably tested this conversion kit about 7 rides now. Every day with a full charge on the battery. She hasn't had the battery below 50%. Sounds very quiet to me and I generally can't tell if the motor is operating when I ride beside her.
Short of pulling everything inside her battery case (all the components) which is where I am almost at and beginning over, I have 2 questions.
1) Do you think that replacing the handle bar connector will fix the problems as Swytch has concluded?
2) Should we cut our losses, keep the front hub wheel and order replacement parts? She has a rear rack on her bike that is empty. Recommendation for similar lightweight low range kits appreciated too. Wouldn't mind BT for the BMS for example.
I don't really care about the money (we still have 1 year warranty) but waiting for a company that took 7 months to ship the kit and have it only work for 18 miles has me thinking, enough of our time and lets make this work reliably and get back to doing what the purpose of this kit - to assist in riding a bike. Although I do enjoy the diagnostic and problem solving like the next guy, it is not as fulfilling if we are playing SWAP-A-MOLE for months and months until something eventually works. Why can't we verify it versus guess and ship one part at a time slowly over the next year. Feels like we are following some flow chart of solutions.
I'll put some dialectic grease on it next and probably do a stress test of the lateral/vertical movements of the connector assemble while in walk mode on my bike stand. I guess I could also put some cardboard shims to tightened the seating should lateral movement be causing the motor to stop/start. The big question is why doesn't it start again if it stop so readily based on the connector movement premise unless it's a wire component in the harness? Really an odd system. If anyone has some swytch work around ideas, I am eager to learn.
Thanks for any advice
Jim
I am really enjoying reading and learning about e-bikes from these forums. I certainly feel that I could buy any kit and do it myself now including building a battery pack thanks to some really great posted video's from here on how to safely do this. I already maintain my own bikes so have most of the specific bike tools and do fix electronics at the component level so not afraid of a multi meter and a soldering iron. I am a retired systems programmer by trade.
My wife received her swytch kit a few weeks ago after 7 months waiting for it. It worked perfectly for 1 and 1/2 rides (approx 18 miles). She has been working with Swytch over the past 10 days to find resolution and I am not sure I buy their conclusion as I see multiple unexplained failure modes. They will ship a new handle bar battery pack assembly (see picture) but don't have it in stock and then it will be 2-4 weeks after that. We are in Victoria, BC Canada so double that time it always feels like. ;--) The problem I have is that her bike was on its kickstand for about 30-45 seconds with her off of the bike and behind it. The front wheel motor suddenly lurched forward throws the bike on the ground with enough force (wrestling pile driver comes to mind) to skew her handbars sideways. We were discussing the motor cutting in/out so I witnessed this first hand. Prior to that we saw this behavior when moving the crank by hand with no result only to see it happen 10-15 seconds later or during coasting at times when she is on it. Normally there is a small delay about 1-2 seconds which is normal for this controller which she likes.
The other symptoms are that she isn't able to keep the motor running for more than 5 mins with the average about 10-20 seconds as the motor cuts off. Sometimes it cuts back in fairly soon which is ok but a lot of time she can't get it to start again for minutes. The only thing that is reliable is that the motor will only operate when you don't need it. ;-) ;-) That means almost never completely up a hill. It works almost always down hill but can fail there too. I estimate her cadence is around 50-60 but I have tested her PAS by turning the peddle with my hand and observed the sensor picking each and every pass of the magnets. Another odd thing which we only saw once was a fully charged battery mysteriously lost 2 bars of charge in 1.5 miles on flat roads??? Fortunately, we ride mostly flat roads or 1-2 degrees gradients here and bought the swytch so she could ride with me. She loves her bike and was hesitant to go electric so it seemed like a good solution and now is hooked on the concept of a front wheel hub motor. I am not sold on her kit but her small hub motor is more than good enough for her style of riding. She never has it past assist level 1. We generally go about 22 miles per ride so her swytch eco kit could be perfect if it would function as advertised.
I have completely done and redone the PAS. I have strapped her battery + controller + BMS + display in that swytch bag so that there is no vertical play with the handle bar connector. I have cleaned the contacts. I have reset the battery pack and re-inserted it into the connector after it begins to fail and she still can't get the hub motor to engage at times. We will pull over, I will verify the PAS and then pull and re-insert the battery+controller+etc and off we go. Motor will not engage at times even after that doing that. We get better results during the first 1-2 miles of our ride where it works more often than it doesn't but can still cut out. The longer she rides during the trip, the more frequent the motor cutting in/out she says.
She has also experienced what felt like riding over a washboard as the front hub motor/wheel started to vibrate is the best way to describe it. It only happened once (very short duration) and we have probably tested this conversion kit about 7 rides now. Every day with a full charge on the battery. She hasn't had the battery below 50%. Sounds very quiet to me and I generally can't tell if the motor is operating when I ride beside her.
Short of pulling everything inside her battery case (all the components) which is where I am almost at and beginning over, I have 2 questions.
1) Do you think that replacing the handle bar connector will fix the problems as Swytch has concluded?
2) Should we cut our losses, keep the front hub wheel and order replacement parts? She has a rear rack on her bike that is empty. Recommendation for similar lightweight low range kits appreciated too. Wouldn't mind BT for the BMS for example.
I don't really care about the money (we still have 1 year warranty) but waiting for a company that took 7 months to ship the kit and have it only work for 18 miles has me thinking, enough of our time and lets make this work reliably and get back to doing what the purpose of this kit - to assist in riding a bike. Although I do enjoy the diagnostic and problem solving like the next guy, it is not as fulfilling if we are playing SWAP-A-MOLE for months and months until something eventually works. Why can't we verify it versus guess and ship one part at a time slowly over the next year. Feels like we are following some flow chart of solutions.
I'll put some dialectic grease on it next and probably do a stress test of the lateral/vertical movements of the connector assemble while in walk mode on my bike stand. I guess I could also put some cardboard shims to tightened the seating should lateral movement be causing the motor to stop/start. The big question is why doesn't it start again if it stop so readily based on the connector movement premise unless it's a wire component in the harness? Really an odd system. If anyone has some swytch work around ideas, I am eager to learn.
Thanks for any advice
Jim
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