Hi All,
Some of you may have read my previous thread about repairing my A2B Metro that I bought as a spares and repair job. Initially I have disassembled the battery with a view of rebuilding the pack. I I think I have a pretty idea on how to do that, but in pushing the Metro round the garage I've discovered that the hub motor is providing a lot of resistance when you try and push the bike or just spin the back wheel.
As a test I hooked up the charger to provide 36 volts to the battery with the battery hooked into the bike (hope this wasn't a bad idea!) with the bike on the stand back wheel up. I gently opened the throttle and the rear wheel span for a moment and then stopped.
At this point I'm thinking that the best idea is to open up the hub motor (as per youtube videos) and take a look inside and see if anything has seized or there are any wires shorting out. While I'm at it I think that I will try and replace the original controller in the wheel with another one on the frame someshere, as I've read that a lot of V1 metros suffer from overheating controllers.
Before I go any further I thought that it would be a good idea to see if I could hook up the hub motor to a 36v supply and do a bench test. The connections coming off the motor are two big power supply wires and four smaller wires which are in a squashed square formation in the plug pins going to the motor.
Any help on identifying what each of the pins are and how to hook everything up for a bench test would be greatly appreciated. I have access to a 36v PSU.
I've had a surf round on the site but can't see this specific information apologies if I've missed it.
Thx
Some of you may have read my previous thread about repairing my A2B Metro that I bought as a spares and repair job. Initially I have disassembled the battery with a view of rebuilding the pack. I I think I have a pretty idea on how to do that, but in pushing the Metro round the garage I've discovered that the hub motor is providing a lot of resistance when you try and push the bike or just spin the back wheel.
As a test I hooked up the charger to provide 36 volts to the battery with the battery hooked into the bike (hope this wasn't a bad idea!) with the bike on the stand back wheel up. I gently opened the throttle and the rear wheel span for a moment and then stopped.
At this point I'm thinking that the best idea is to open up the hub motor (as per youtube videos) and take a look inside and see if anything has seized or there are any wires shorting out. While I'm at it I think that I will try and replace the original controller in the wheel with another one on the frame someshere, as I've read that a lot of V1 metros suffer from overheating controllers.
Before I go any further I thought that it would be a good idea to see if I could hook up the hub motor to a 36v supply and do a bench test. The connections coming off the motor are two big power supply wires and four smaller wires which are in a squashed square formation in the plug pins going to the motor.
Any help on identifying what each of the pins are and how to hook everything up for a bench test would be greatly appreciated. I have access to a 36v PSU.
I've had a surf round on the site but can't see this specific information apologies if I've missed it.
Thx