Ebike Commuter
Member
It can be frustrating to have a bike that loses power unexpectedly and even more so to have multiple trips to the bike shop result in no improvement. In my case, I contacted the BH Technical Service department by phone and after I indicated That I wanted to return the bike, they offered to ship a new battery to the shop. BH also stated that if the battery didn't fix the bike, they would exchange the bike for a new one. The battery did fix the problem, so they did not replace the bike. The controller, wiring harness and display were also replaced prior to the battery (controller replaced twice). However, these components had no effect on the power loss and were needlessly changed out.Yes the display would go dim, you could read some of the numbers just barely i would shut off the display and wait 30 seconds then turn it back on and continue riding till the next episode. Since then BH gave me a new updated display to try which did not correct the problem. Now they gave me a replacement battery to try and as soon as the temps drop below 100 i will try it. my bike always acts up on my ride home a 10 mile ride with 1000 feet climb in elevation overall and i usually leave work at 6pm when the temps lately are over 95 degrees which is very difficult for me especially when my bike quits on my last grade which is 5% to 10% for half a mile. if this dosent fix my bike i am sending it back for them to fix or replace i am tired of changing parts and my local shop cannot test it to determine the problem.
Based upon the information you posted, there appears up be a relationship between the power loss and high ambient temp combined with increased load (which also likely increases the temperature in both the controlled and motor). The code 12 seems to confirm the bike is overheating. I wonder if code 12 is triggered by a temperature sensor in the motor or in the controller. Is the motor or frame adjacent to the controller very hot to the touch when the power cuts out?
My experience has been that the troubleshooting performed by the bike shop was not based upon symptoms, trouble codes from the controller or component testing. Rather the approach used was to replace components, one by one (5 components were replaced in my case).
It seems like it would be useful for bike shops that sell ebikes to have diagnostic tools to trouble shoot such issues, or, the bikes could come with these tools built in. For example, if the display or an add on display were able to show the motor and/ or controller temp under load, you could use this information to compare between bikes, identify under which conditions the power loss occurred and hopefully identify the faulty component.