I am really confused and have a serious problem here...
This morning I plug in my magic pie 3 equipped bike to my 48v battery, and the thing basically takes off at 400w (not exaggerating saw the reading on my cycle analyst)!I managed to lift the back wheel fast enough to not let it pull it away, but I had to literally put it against a concrete wall and have it do a burnout for 3 seconds as I reached over to immediately unplug the battery pack!(later thought laying down may have been better but I had to think fast at that moment... and was not sure if the wheels would still touch the floor as I have never laid it down.) This was my worst nightmare and I cannot believe it has actually happened! It wasn't an immediate 400w though. At first I plugged it into the pack and noticed it was twitching or slightly moving every now and then, maybe 5/10 watts. I observed for about 2 minutes and figured it was nothing serious so I started getting ready to get on it when it took off all of a sudden!
This is the fourth time I have plugged it in and I was planning on doing a long trip today and am now extremely confused. Everything is brand new, and I have rode it successfully for about 20km three times without a problem, including going steep hills at 1200w and leaving it outside unattended while plugged in for hours.
So first thing to comes to mind: Yesterday I rode in moderate rain (no problems during the ride).
Anybody please any ideas?
This is the setup: 48v 20ah lifepo4, magic pie 3 (26") with internal controller, thumb throttle. Cycle analyst (but not really relevant I guess as it is not controlling anything.)
Worth noting: When I used the ebrake/regen it cut the motor, as I let go of it though immediately the motor takes off intermittently or full 400w at times, but again it would immediately cut any wattage the second I used one of the two ebrake levers. Also if I used the throttle, even slightly, it would not surpass the input I was giving it (stable when using throttle normally). Only when everything is at rest does it do it.
Please help!
Much love.
This morning I plug in my magic pie 3 equipped bike to my 48v battery, and the thing basically takes off at 400w (not exaggerating saw the reading on my cycle analyst)!I managed to lift the back wheel fast enough to not let it pull it away, but I had to literally put it against a concrete wall and have it do a burnout for 3 seconds as I reached over to immediately unplug the battery pack!(later thought laying down may have been better but I had to think fast at that moment... and was not sure if the wheels would still touch the floor as I have never laid it down.) This was my worst nightmare and I cannot believe it has actually happened! It wasn't an immediate 400w though. At first I plugged it into the pack and noticed it was twitching or slightly moving every now and then, maybe 5/10 watts. I observed for about 2 minutes and figured it was nothing serious so I started getting ready to get on it when it took off all of a sudden!
This is the fourth time I have plugged it in and I was planning on doing a long trip today and am now extremely confused. Everything is brand new, and I have rode it successfully for about 20km three times without a problem, including going steep hills at 1200w and leaving it outside unattended while plugged in for hours.
So first thing to comes to mind: Yesterday I rode in moderate rain (no problems during the ride).
Anybody please any ideas?
This is the setup: 48v 20ah lifepo4, magic pie 3 (26") with internal controller, thumb throttle. Cycle analyst (but not really relevant I guess as it is not controlling anything.)
Worth noting: When I used the ebrake/regen it cut the motor, as I let go of it though immediately the motor takes off intermittently or full 400w at times, but again it would immediately cut any wattage the second I used one of the two ebrake levers. Also if I used the throttle, even slightly, it would not surpass the input I was giving it (stable when using throttle normally). Only when everything is at rest does it do it.
Please help!
Much love.