Chazmo
Active Member
- Region
- USA
- City
- Central Massachusetts
I was just about to post this to preserve this table for posterity before I saw the wonderful news about Juiced’s new owners (Lectric)!!! https://forums.electricbikereview.com/threads/new-juiced-bike-owners.57543/
But here it is, anyway, for posterity. Hopefully the Lectric guys will be able to get the manuals back online on the new website sometime this year. This comes from the RipCurrent S (2022) owner’s manual, stock controller. If any of you wants to elaborate any with information or diagnosis about what these codes mean, please do so. I have done what I’m able to for both error 8 and 9, as I’ve run into these. I would love a more technical understanding of (all of) these.
Error 8 is something I’ve run into rarely/occasionally. It seems to be an intermittent problem, perhaps related to humidity or high stress on the motor with slow revolutions.
Error 9 is something I see fairly regularly at bike startup. It seems to go away if I jar the motor connection cable or bounce/ride the bike a little (without assist, which is unavailable). Usually it’s gone within a few seconds. It doesn’t seem to require a power-cycle to get rid of it.
But here it is, anyway, for posterity. Hopefully the Lectric guys will be able to get the manuals back online on the new website sometime this year. This comes from the RipCurrent S (2022) owner’s manual, stock controller. If any of you wants to elaborate any with information or diagnosis about what these codes mean, please do so. I have done what I’m able to for both error 8 and 9, as I’ve run into these. I would love a more technical understanding of (all of) these.
Error 8 is something I’ve run into rarely/occasionally. It seems to be an intermittent problem, perhaps related to humidity or high stress on the motor with slow revolutions.
Error 9 is something I see fairly regularly at bike startup. It seems to go away if I jar the motor connection cable or bounce/ride the bike a little (without assist, which is unavailable). Usually it’s gone within a few seconds. It doesn’t seem to require a power-cycle to get rid of it.