Hi Franco,
It's difficult to say for sure whether the locking of the front wheel was caused by a mechanical or an electronic fault, but I can say that you have a Magic Pie motor which is a version III or later because it has the exposed controller.
However, I am very puzzled by the rusty steel centre section on the removed side cover as this cover is usually solid aluminium which does not rust.
Does the motor still work, or is it difficult to spin by hand since the incident?
As you have not answered this particular question I will try to cover both options:
1) If the motor has stopped working completely and was now very stiff to turn
(prior to dismantling it) it could most likely be attributed to controller failure.
If the controller failed with two or more MOSFETS in a short circuit state, this could have caused the severe braking effect that you experienced.
Another forum member experience something very similar to you on a much earlier version of the Magic Pie. Check out
this thread for more information.
2) If the motor still ran normally and the wheel rotated freely after the accident, it is less likely to be attributed to the controller.
I have been carefully studying the pictures of your motor and the right hand side cover appears to show signs of severe rubbing, as if something could possibly have been jammed between the side cover and the front fork:
Was the front motor axle still securely fixed to the fork legs or did the dropouts break off during regen causing the wheel to break loose and jam in the forks?
Does your bike have aluminium forks, and if so, were any
torque arms fitted?
The only other thing I can see that doesn't look correct is a small piece of magnet appears to be missing
(circled below) inside the motor ring.
If this had come loose it could have jammed between the magnets and the stator assembly, but I would expect the tiny magnet part to simply break up rather than jam the wheel up completely.
Alan