I tested volts from z9 to the hall sensors....just under 5v to each...pcb perfect....its a brand new motor! 80 pole pairs based on 5:1 gearing and 16 pairs. Autotune defaults to sensorless. I tried kv 9-13 and no difference. Anyone have a clue?
A motor can't be damaged by a battery short. They are not connected to each other; the controller is between them.The original motor (same type)/controller (different; KLS4812 sine) was damaged from a battery short.
Then the controller can't read the sensors during motor operation (even if it does at manual-turning-speeds), which generally means a shielding problem.The sensored operation on the z9 will not run when forced with the sensorless fallback disabled.
and that was shielded internally between phases and halls (meaning, it had a metal braid or foil around all the hall wires, with the phase wires outside that braid or foil) then it sounds like the controller itself was damaged by whatever the "battery short" issue actually was.Regarding "noise": I didnt have issue with the previous controller prior to damage. The new z9 has the same shielding as the motor cable. I did try separating the hall wires from the phase between controller and axel exit, although it doesnt make sense to me.
kV is RPM per volt, or RPM / Volt.I dont know how to calculate the kv. The owners manual suggests starting with 10....I tried 9,10,11,12,13.
Does it put them between the stator teeth instead? That's effectively the same, for magnetic noise induced into the sensors. They are there to detect the rotor magnets passing, but they detect *all* magnetic fields that pass thru them from any source. Because they have to detect the rotor magnets, they must be placed very close to those magnets, so normally they are in the stator teeth. They could be placed on the outside edge of the rotor to minimize detection of stator fields, but this is not something I've seen in any of these types of motors.The hall sensors in the motor are not embedded in the stator teeth.
ERPM is the "electrical RPM", which is the number of poles times the RPM. Most of the common ebike motors are 23 pole pairs (46 poles), or similar. In a geared hub the motor itself spins much faster so that the gearing down it gets to wheel speed can convert that extra speed into torque. That makes it's ERPM several times higher than a non-geared hub, and some controllers simply can't switch that fast, or read hall sensor output that switches that fast.simply be unable to deal with the high ERPM of the geared hubmotor (not an uncommon problem in controllers)
Assuming ERPM is the same as kv.....