So I decided to take the rear cover off of my GM battery to tighten up the charging port since it was rattling around a bit. I stood the battery on edge and removed the nut from the back and then the nut slid down the wire and contacted a part on the circuit board and sparks flew
Clearly this was my own fault but I feel bad now since these things are not cheap... (over $500 CAD after shipping) and part of buying my GM kit was to save money. Just a reminder to people to be careful.
I will post some photos eventually.
So not the most uplifting post from my end but now I have to decide what to do next. I'm assuming its not worth the repair since who know how many parts got fried besides the ones visible (one of the mosfet looking things is half melted).
I have cut my e-bike season short (probably about a month of decent weather left here) and now I have to pay for gas.
My plans assuming the battery is not worth repairing:
WINTER/SPRING:
strip down my bike and turn it pack into a normal bike
clean up all the wires etc.. and hub motors (is there any risk in cracking these things open so I don't destroy anything else?)
sell bike for like $30-50
buy a better bike like a Giant or a Kona up to $650
get a new battery
slap the Pies back on and hopefully have a trouble-free year with this new setup
Strange thing is I hooked a multimeter up to this battery after the incident and it read full voltage but the bike wont turn on. Would the cells still be useful to someone? If I decide to get rid of this damaged battery, I'd like to try and at least get a a bit of money for it since I'm sure the cells are still ok.