Yeah the Ultra and their frame specific motors lock us out of programming We sell the s*it out of BBSxx series. BBSHD have held up well. As long as your dealer doesn't have backwards compatible rotors and crappy firmware Bafang tried to pedal. That said we still ride 2014 BBS01's, But if there's an issue parts are vapor ware.The Bafang programming sucks.
The title says it all. I'm on an information/opinion hunt that will hopefully help inform my next buying decision. Your input is most appreciated.
The title is actually ambiguous. Better start with the bike requirements.The title says it all. I'm on an information/opinion hunt that will hopefully help inform my next buying decision. Your input is most appreciated.
I've got 2 bikes with BaFang Ultra motors, and both motors have had issues early:
The Bafang programming sucks. No-one knows what many of the parameters actually mean and you can't have different profiles for different uses. You basically get a torque map, which most think is by crank speed range, and then for each PAS level you get to cap the % wattage/current applied. So, you can't really have an On-Road and an Off-Road profile that's switchable on the bike. Although, with a EggRider and a sheet of notes you could reprogam it whenever you wanted to switch.
- Number one motor makes a creaking noise while pedaling. Not with throttle nor coasting. Creaking level seems to be inversely proportional to pedal effort. I'll post a video in the BaFang group (which is where this thread should be) when I get a chance.
- Number two motor outright failed at less than 120 miles. Was intermittent for a bit before. Turned out that if I rolled the bike backwards (to get the chain to move backwards) it would start working again until I coasted, then wouldn't re-startup. Sent back to bike manufacturer, who is sending me back either a replacement or the motor fixed (haven't heard back which yet).
I've done some 30 and 40 mile rides, on-road, with decent hills - about 1000 feet of elevation gain every 10 miles. As I'm getting back into shape I find that I rarely go over 750 watts even though my bike/motor can do 2,000 watts. Unfortunately, I don't know how to get a torque applied map out of EggRider.
The title says it all. I'm on an information/opinion hunt that will hopefully help inform my next buying decision. Your input is most appreciated.
agreed, until you need a part...Probably the biggest bike motor maker in the world, shipping close to a milllion units annually? There will be a few failures with that kind of volume.
I have two hub motors. G06 500W and SWXH 250W, and a middrive BBS02. These were purchased in 2016. It's 2020. No motor problems.
That is a fluke. But who ever said bulletproof? Who did you buy from? Lugging with a 52T will kill any BBSxx series motors. I didn’t have to honor a warranty on more than .25% (one quarter %) of my BBSxx sales in 2020.I have gone through 3 bbshd motors in 3 years with a dual battery set up on a 52T front cog, my last motor lasted less than 6 months, the first motor had a gear issue replaced under warrant, the last 2 burnt out, not sure what is going wrong in my circumstance, I thought they are supposed to be bullet proof. I’m considering now going to the more apparently robust ultra motor, fingers crossed, with mixed reports on these as well. I’ve also had a 250W motor and their a waste of time, though the new Bosch CX motors seem to be getting good reports and apparently if you chip them they can do similar speeds to the bafang motors.
That is a fluke. But who ever said bulletproof? Who did you buy from? Lugging with a 52T will kill any BBSxx series motors. I didn’t have to honor a warranty on more than .25% (one quarter %) of my BBSxx sales in 2020.
can you do that? I thought newer generation Bosch motors will detect a chip and brick the motor/controller?the new Bosch CX motors seem to be getting good reports and apparently if you chip them they can do similar speeds to the bafang motors.