Alan is an absolute genius for troubleshooting, but he forgot one thing to check. If the brake switch is made, the motor won't run. Check your brake levers aren't ajar.
Set the meter on a DC voltage range suitable for your maximum battery voltage and start by checking the battery voltage at the controller between the B+ and B- terminals.
Leave the black meter probe connected to the B- terminal and then test the following contacts with the red probe:
- G Should show battery voltage
- Z/0V Should read ~0V
- B Should read high with the brakes released and ~0V when the brakes are activated
- T1/5V Should read ~5V
- T2 Should vary between ~0.8V and ~4.5V when throttle is activated (make sure the wheel is clear of the ground just in case it starts to spin)
- H+/5V Should read ~5V
- H-/0V Should read ~0V
- Ha Should vary between 0 and ~5V when the wheel is moved very slowly by hand
- Hb Should vary between 0 and ~5V when the wheel is moved very slowly by hand
- Hc Should vary between 0 and ~5V when the wheel is moved very slowly by hand
Dennis, I tried to ensure the tests that I suggested would cover all of the possible problem areas that I could envisage, without having to provide extensive details explaining why each check has to be performed.
If the result of any of the tests is not as expected, we can then focus our attention on that particular problem area.
A stuck lever
(or faulty brake switch/shorted brake wires etc.) would have been highlighted during the third check that I suggested, as the voltmeter would have been continually reading ~0V, even with the brakes released.
By checking the reading with the brakes applied and released, it helps to identify where the problem could be.
If the reading remained high with the brakes activated, this could simply signify a fault with either the brake switches or their wiring, or more likely a break
(or poor connection) somewhere in the main ground connection between the controls and the controller, which would definitely prevent the motor from running. Test no 5 could also help to confirm the same fault if the throttle signal remained high when the throttle was released.
Certain tests that I sometimes suggest, may appear to be unorthodox, unrelated, or perceived by others as totally unnecessary, but after decades of troubleshooting and problem solving
(both mechanical and electrical) I have learnt to keep a very open mind, and never to rule out the unexpected.
So there is usually a valid
(and logical) reason for the questions I ask, and the tests that I suggest.
Sometimes I just wish I could remember what that reason was.
Alan