Bluenotgreen
New Member
I am quite a new Haibike rider (Yamaha Sduro) and I am slowly coming to grips with how everything works. I cant say I know much at all but I'm trying to learnAs has already been said, you have to watch out for those engineers LOL.
One thing goes through my mind. There is a sensor on the spokes which measures the bikes speed and provides an input signal to the computer.
Somehow the computer gets a signal that you have started pedalling again which I think is independant. The combination of that "pedalling" signal, plus the measured wheel speed results in a certain "assist" being applied to the motor. The wheel has to turn a complete revolution before the "speed" signal catches up and could it be that this gives the "hesitation" that you sense ??
I am quite a new Haibike rider (Yamaha Sduro) and I am slowly coming to grips with how everything works. I cant say I know much at all but I'm trying to learnAs has already been said, you have to watch out for those engineers LOL.
One thing goes through my mind. There is a sensor on the spokes which measures the bikes speed and provides an input signal to the computer.
Somehow the computer gets a signal that you have started pedalling again which I think is independant. The combination of that "pedalling" signal, plus the measured wheel speed results in a certain "assist" being applied to the motor. The wheel has to turn a complete revolution before the "speed" signal catches up and could it be that this gives the "hesitation" that you sense ??