Dynz
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- United Kingdom
Thanks @Gionnirocket, helpful as per!
I saw no difference between 38 and 42... so it really is dependent on the voltage output of the particular throttle.You can take the throttle up to 42 and it makes for a much finer, granular control. This will be about balance and very fine control of the throttle not power.
4.2v is the max input the motor controller accepts. So you set it to that and let the aftermarket throttle decide what your max is. My little cheapie Bafang thumb throttles are dramatically better with this. Check out the End Voltage discussion in Karl Gesslein's programming guide he goes over this in a bit more detail:I saw no difference between 38 and 42... so it really is dependent on the voltage output of the particular throttle.
But with the stock thumb throttle I believe you are correct that it will go to 42
Find download in this thread.Update - I found the driver after doing some more digging! It works now. Give me a shout if anyone needs it.
Well that article and what has been rehashed as presumed fact is years old and may not be relevant anymore as there has been updates to the motor/controllers. I can tell you for certain that my throttle starts sooner and is smoother with a wider range when set to 0.9v.4.2v is the max input the motor controller accepts. So you set it to that and let the aftermarket throttle decide what your max is. My little cheapie Bafang thumb throttles are dramatically better with this. Check out the End Voltage discussion in Karl Gesslein's programming guide he goes over this in a bit more detail:
A Hacker’s Guide To Programming The BBS02 & BBSHD
One way that the BBS02 middrive unit shines over other competition like the Bosch is the ability to program the controller yourself. Although the process of programming the controller will void any…electricbike-blog.com
Also the controller starts accepting input at 1.1v so there's no point in setting it lower for the same reason. Motor can't use it.
Bottom line: Widen the throttle settings and its a dramatic, night/day difference. I have yet to see anywhere that the 4.2v max has changed, from any source that tests such things. Is there one? That article comes from 2015 but it used a number of very knowledgeable sources in the DIY industry. What has been contradicted within it? The only things I have seen are disagreements about how to use settings, not their possible ranges. Hell... I pretty much use none of the assist level settings and go a completely different way. But thats a decision on personal use, not hardware capability.Well that article and what has been rehashed as presumed fact is years old and may not be relevant anymore. I can tell you for certain that my throttle starts sooner and is smoother with a wider range when set to 0.9v.
And if the controller is looking for 4.2v as 100% and the throttle doesn't output 4.2v... then the motor will not output 100%
That is the whole point of having these as adjustable settings.
I just contradicted it... My throttle works with a Smoother wider range set as stated.Bottom line: Widen the throttle settings and its a dramatic, night/day difference. I have yet to see anywhere that the 4.2v max has changed, from any source that tests such things. Is there one? That article comes from 2015 but it used a number of very knowledgeable sources in the DIY industry. What has been contradicted within it? The only things I have seen are disagreements about how to use settings, not their possible ranges. Hell... I pretty much use none of the assist level settings and go a completely different way. But thats a decision on personal use, not hardware capability.
This is not particularly helpful to your immediate question, but your experience is exactly why I decided to pony up the $100 (at the time) for the Luna dedicated programming tool. Now, 4 or 5 motors later I am really glad I did. For starters I can more easily pack it along with a new motor and tinker during a ride, whereas before I would have to leave the laptop at the house and loop back to make a change. I just pull over, do a quick plugin and job done. Much easier to use. Its inability to store more than one custom EL file is made up for by me snapping pics of the screens with my phone.So I just got the cable and upon connecting, the PC won't seem to recognise it.
Any thoughts on what might be going on?
No worries, the driver I uploaded earlier fixed my issue entirely. And I paid a mere 15 quid for the cable. Whatever works!This is not particularly helpful to your immediate question, but your experience is exactly why I decided to pony up the $100 (at the time) for the Luna dedicated programming tool.
Right back at you. I already said you let the throttle decide what your max is. Set the controller to its widest range. 11 and 42. If your throttle is capable of that then you'll get that range. if not you'll get whatever it gives you.I just contradicted it... My throttle works with a Smoother wider range set as stated.
From your article...
"If you use an aftermarket throttle you will need to test to see what voltage the hall sensor throttle is giving off at full throttle and set this number slightly lower than that voltage shown on the meter (times 10)."
Not sure why you think what you think...
I'm sorry but I don't believe that you understand the throttle voltage settings function.Right back at you. I already said you let the throttle decide what your max is. Set the controller to its widest range. 11 and 42. If your throttle is capable of that then you'll get that range. if not you'll get whatever it gives you.
In the Sondors Rockstar thread there is a video of a guy trying to do wheelies on a new Rockstar and getting little burps of air etc. At one point he opined that possibly wheelies couldn't be done on ebikes. (He was new to ebikes.)Just wondering how he has the wheel come up so effortlessly , no pedaling or anything. I'm thinking I need some more torque or program the throttle so it kicks in sooner or at higher percentage, I don't know.
I think it requires "being" an eBike "Rockstar"In the Sondors Rockstar thread there is a video of a guy trying to do wheelies on a new Rockstar and getting little burps of air etc. At one point he opined that possibly wheelies couldn't be done on ebikes. (He was new to ebikes.)
On another video in that thread where they showcased the three new Sondors mid motor bikes together a guy pulls a wheelie in a pedal stroke or so and just keeps it going for apparently as long as he likes - looked like almost all balance to me. (Also a Rockstar.)
OK so what am I missing?I'm sorry but I don't believe that you understand the throttle voltage settings function.
It is stated correctly in the article that you referenced and as I am trying to explain.
On ebikes you need to disconnect the brake sensors to wheelie. Otherwise its hard (impossible) to modulate the power and braking.In the Sondors Rockstar thread there is a video of a guy trying to do wheelies on a new Rockstar and getting little burps of air etc. At one point he opined that possibly wheelies couldn't be done on ebikes. (He was new to ebikes.)
On another video in that thread where they showcased the three new Sondors mid motor bikes together a guy pulls a wheelie in a pedal stroke or so and just keeps it going for apparently as long as he likes - looked like almost all balance to me. (Also a Rockstar.)