But what if the actual black wire on the throttle cable was lose? The black wire that comes from the throttle itself?
But would this give beeps when the battery is switched on? You said this would cause the safety function to cut in to stop it from full speed.
I asked this before. Does the safety function give 3 beeps too.
With the black throttle wire disconnected, there are no beeps when power is turned on and the motor does nots spin, even though the throttle signal voltage is ~4.25V.
If the black wire is reconnected, and then disconnected again, the motor will then run at full speed continually, but still no beeps.
In this condition, applying the brakes will only stop the power going to the motor if the black wires on the brakes switches are still grounded. If there is a break is in the main black wire from the controller it will not stop the power!
The three beeps will only occur if the signal voltage to the controller falls below ~0.6V.If this is controlled by software, it should be possible to modify the programming slightly to include an over voltage check as well to cover failure of the ground connection:
If Signal voltage <0.6V or Signal voltage >4.0V then activate throttle failure mode
On my bike
(with everything connected and working correctly) when you switch on power without the throttle being released
(signal voltage greater than 1.25V) there are no beeps, but the safety function is activated. As soon as you release the throttle completely, it automatically resets itself and the throttle works normally again.
Hope this makes things a bit clearer.
Alan