Only 2v on the bottom of the battery however apparently this is normal ??Are you getting battery voltage at the bottom of the battery where it connects to the bike?
Only 2v on the bottom of the battery however apparently this is normal ??Are you getting battery voltage at the bottom of the battery where it connects to the bike?
One shows + and the other - so I assume those are the two used for a reading however when I’m home later I will try the othersMine reads full voltage at the bottom (between two of the pins). There are 4 pins but only two are used. Cant remember which two though.
Cheers for that information definitely a job to do when. I get back from work laterIf you take the side plate off just below the battery you can easily see which two are used. If you aren’t getting 40ish volts on these pins with the battery turned on then the issue is likely within the battery. There are various connections in this chamber that are probably worth checking. There is a detachable connector for the battery power to the controller which may be worth checking if the battery itself appears to be ok.
That shows that your battery is good. As the battery goes down, one green light goes out, then the next, then the next, leaving the red light to show that it's low.Still showing one red light and three green which I assume is some sort of fault code prehaps ?
I’ve done that and it’s only showing 2V it does flicker through though at first 27 and the. Very fast down to 2VLooks from the photo that the outer two terminals are connected to the battery. It should be full battery voltage between the two outer terminals. If it isn’t then the fault is with the battery. Measure directly on the bottom of the battery.
Thanks for the advice sounds complicated not sure if my problems are that small I’ll come back to it tomorrow after work with a fresh mind as it’s been a long day many everyone for the advice I don’t want to quit but my electronic knowledge is very basicThat shows that your battery is good. As the battery goes down, one green light goes out, then the next, then the next, leaving the red light to show that it's low.
The connector you showed in the photo is the one to pull. If you're lucky, it might reset the BMS.
If you still have no voltage on the output terminals, there are now two possibilities:
1. The path between the BMS and the terminals is interrupted. that could be a blown fuse, dry solder or broken solder joint, or a faulty connection. You can find that by putting your red probe on red pin of the red deans connector that you probed before, then probe the black wire where it comes from the cell-pack to the BMS (marked B-), then where it leaves the BMS (marked P-), then on the output terminal. Then, put your black probe on the black pin in the red Deans connector and use the red probe to check where the red output wire attaches to the BMS (marked P+, C+ or B+ or any combination), then the output terminal. You'll have to scrape a bit of that gum off to make a good contact with the probe.
2. The BMS has detected a fault and switched off the output, but still allows charging. This is the most likely fault which would be confirmed when you see from the tests above that You get voltage on the thick wire coming into the BMS (B-), but not the one going out (P-).
If (2.) above is confirmed, then you have to check the voltages on the multi-pin connector. You put pull the connector off, put your black probe on the black wire in the red Deans connector, then probe each pin in the connector, starting at one end and working to the other. Write down each value and post here. In the side of the connector, you will see slots with silver contacts in. That's where you probe rather than the pins unless you have very thin probes.
Thanks I will take a look later after workI've told you how to check the battery in a way that will reveal the source of the problem. It's not complicated to do.
In other words, they don't know how to test an ebike and diagnose the problem. They figure that if they change every single electrical item, it might come to life. It would be a shame if after all that it was the PAS and your £895 wouldn't fix it.Took it to a dealer (not the best idea but no other shops wanted to know )
Can’t justify that price for repair
Shall I get a second opinion?
Failing that I’ll sell it anyone interested ?
thanks for everyone’s advice
not sure what I can do it’s outside my area of expertise in an idea world they could put a new battery on and see if that resolved the issue but apparently they don’t stock them even though they are a dealerIn other words, they don't know how to test an ebike and diagnose the problem. They figure that if they change every single electrical item, it might come to life. It would be a shame if after all that it was the PAS and your £895 wouldn't fix it.