A chain of repairs led me to changing the connection blocks on my backup bike hailong battery and sled as when upside down for the fix/testing the battery 'fell' out of connection with its spade and clip connectors due in part to snapped retaining slides on the battery base.. SO a change to the Pin and socket style which is used on my other bikes would then also allow more battery sharing and should resolve the connection issue too, win/win
When done I lamented the lack of an on/off switch on this battery in the local forum where the original issue/fix was under discussion, and the possibility of adding a switch was raised by either using a switch connected to relevant solder pad if present on the bms pcb, or if not by interrupting one of the sense wires instead.
Sounded good to me and amazon could supply some small waterproof latching switches quickly, so i got stuck in and revealed a bms pcb with 2 solder pads next to a 'SW' label.. unfortunately attaching neither a momentary or latching switch to these pads had any effect on the battery output voltage.
So i opted to snip the sense wire labelled B2 connecting to the bms through a 11 wire/connection plug/socket labelled B-, B1,B2,B3,,B10, B- being a black wire B10 a red wire and B1-9 all yellow wires. I selectd B2 as it appeared to have the most wire slack and would be the easiest to hack a switch into.
well that didnt work either, I have a led volt meter attached to the battery output, and pulling the whole 11pin plug from the bms cuts the battery output voltage straight off. so I dont think its residual capacitor charge? and i left the battery sat with wire 2 for for over 30 mins and the lit voltage display showing 1 decimal point didnt drop at all.
Testing the sw solderpads with a latching switch it depresses to make contact and is slightly raised (1-2mm?) when contact is broken.


After 15minutes minimum of cutting the B2 wire

opening the battery wrap to confirm the B2 wire was connected to the second set of cells in the pack..

Next thing is of course to repair the snipped wire, but after that, should i cut my losses and wrap it up and live with a switchless battery?
OR should i continue with the wire snipping roulette game??
Or is some guru gonna tell me my bms is a worthless piece of ****???
BTW the original fix is a hall sensor error (KT display er-03) and probing the sensors while spinning the rear wheel while the motor system is powered up for the 5v logic system is what i want to get on to
If you got this far thanks for reading..
When done I lamented the lack of an on/off switch on this battery in the local forum where the original issue/fix was under discussion, and the possibility of adding a switch was raised by either using a switch connected to relevant solder pad if present on the bms pcb, or if not by interrupting one of the sense wires instead.
Sounded good to me and amazon could supply some small waterproof latching switches quickly, so i got stuck in and revealed a bms pcb with 2 solder pads next to a 'SW' label.. unfortunately attaching neither a momentary or latching switch to these pads had any effect on the battery output voltage.
So i opted to snip the sense wire labelled B2 connecting to the bms through a 11 wire/connection plug/socket labelled B-, B1,B2,B3,,B10, B- being a black wire B10 a red wire and B1-9 all yellow wires. I selectd B2 as it appeared to have the most wire slack and would be the easiest to hack a switch into.
well that didnt work either, I have a led volt meter attached to the battery output, and pulling the whole 11pin plug from the bms cuts the battery output voltage straight off. so I dont think its residual capacitor charge? and i left the battery sat with wire 2 for for over 30 mins and the lit voltage display showing 1 decimal point didnt drop at all.
Testing the sw solderpads with a latching switch it depresses to make contact and is slightly raised (1-2mm?) when contact is broken.


After 15minutes minimum of cutting the B2 wire

opening the battery wrap to confirm the B2 wire was connected to the second set of cells in the pack..

Next thing is of course to repair the snipped wire, but after that, should i cut my losses and wrap it up and live with a switchless battery?
OR should i continue with the wire snipping roulette game??
Or is some guru gonna tell me my bms is a worthless piece of ****???
BTW the original fix is a hall sensor error (KT display er-03) and probing the sensors while spinning the rear wheel while the motor system is powered up for the 5v logic system is what i want to get on to
If you got this far thanks for reading..