Yes a separate front wheel harness would be better.
Golden Motors Canada lists two seperate part numbers for the 10 pin MP4/SP4 wiring harness:
MP4-10PIN-Front and
MP4-10PIN-rearThey however do not indicate what the difference is (
length?). I am ordering one. I will dissect it to document the pin outs and wire colors.
However is not so difficult with some planning to cut solder and isolate. there will be an elongated bulb on the cable so it comes down to what you are most comfortable with.
I have been thinking about exactly that.
First of all note that bike has only a rear hub coaster brake and strangely I am running out of space to mount things on the handle bars. If I install lights and/or a horn then they will be 12 volt not 36 volt devices. Thus I would like to repurpose the 2 button switch to be cruise control and front 'regen' brake. I am assuming both of the pushbuttons in the switch are momentary switches.
Secondly with the existing wiring harness design, if one needs to remove the front wheel to fix a flat then they must also remove (
cut away) a great deal of the wiring harness as well. A properly designed harness should have a connection very close to the hub to rectify this problem.
See the two attached images (
the color coding is arbitrary). The first is what I think is running through that ugly blob closest to the motor. The second represents the new cable splice. My concept is as follows:
1) Cut the main motor cable below the first big blob.
2) Separate the battery power wires for termination with wire nuts
(until I find something better).
3) Splice in the 8 pin male to the remaining wires as noted in the second picture.
4) Cut the 8 pin female pigtail to an appropriate length.
5) Splice in the male pigtails for the display meter, throttle and two button switch as noted in the second picture.
6) Color code connectors: yellow=meter, green=throttle, blue= switch.
Actually 3 and 4 above should say 10 pin but there is NO documentation on GM's new MP4/SP4 harness.
Thoughts or comments ?