***EDIT*** See my posts below after 2 years / 10,000km of riding with the motor. All is well and the MP5 has been very reliable for me.
Hello All,
I purchased the MP5 Vector 700c rear kit from GM Canada for my urban style raleigh bike. The bike is fitted with standard equipment and aside from the battery mounted on the downtube, and the rider (between 170-200lbs) there is no unusual additional weight or haulage involved.
Upon installation and a single afternoon of riding I noticed a very light knocking sound which seems to echo out of the motor case.
Video: (this is the second motor, after the sound has grown louder over a weeks time)
https://youtu.be/eNyXze2GE3QI checked spoke tension and tolerances between bike components. The spokes had worked in and needed to be tensioned lightly but none were severely out of spec. The brake caliper had no issues with clearance and there are no observed markings on the screws for the MP5 cooling cover nor the brake caliper. As the MP5 is new to me and I'm unfamiliar with it's characteristics I wondered if it was the spokes, even though under load, with the heavy motor .. still working themselves in. Over the next week, with careful riding the sound got worse. It will get louder if the riders center of gravity is leaned to either side of the bike, for example when turning.
I removed the wheel from the bike and removed the freewheel, disc brake rotor, cooling fin cover and the controller leaving just the hub intact and installed it into the frames dropouts. I removed the bikes rear derailleur and the freewheel so that the hub could spin freely in the frame with no drivetrain or braking components able to come into contact. As the motor was spun freely in the air by hand, each rotation there was a dull clunk and at the opposite 180 degree position, a loud knock.
https://youtu.be/ulo8g-bsmOY This is the first motor with no controller, brakes or drivetrain on the bike. The bike is upside down with the motor free spinning in the air. This was taken indoors and the sound is much louder in this recording than in person.
Being unfamiliar with the warranty aspects of GM and the MP5 I opened a support ticket with GM Canada and didn't want to open the motor covers. As the sound was coming from inside the hub and there were no bike components involved I could only expect this was a manufacturing issue. I was really enjoying the MP5 and as the kit was only a week and a half old, I asked GM canada if we could cross ship the motor and they could assess for warranty refund and the exchange went well. I kept everything from the first kit except the MP5 motor and wheel assembly. I retained the original vector controller and screws, cooling fin cover and screws, freewheel and all associated wiring accessories from the first kit. The new hub worked well but sadly experienced the same decline. The new hub suffers the same knock and bump sound as the first motor after only about a week. I've been the only rider of the bike and neither of the 2 hubs experienced any potholes in the time on the road. The tires are 700x32c and I kept them between 30-40psi to keep the shock of the road off the motor and myself. After finally deciding to break down and pop the covers off of a new product,
edit: I removed only the cover from the controller side of the housing. The large bearing remained on the controller side cover and slipped easily off the stator/controller housing. I removed the screws from the freewheel side cover but it seemed like it wouldn't budge with light tapping and I didn't want to put unwarranted force on the new parts without prior experience. I found that the stator, winding, magnets and wiring all look to be in expected condition and are not causing any issues. There is no visible scoring on any. The side covers, bearings and axle align to hold everything together in spec. I believe that either the side covers, which don't appear to have any keying to keep them in place other than torque from the screws are allowing one of the bearings to sit loose on the axle or in the cover or the stator is finding itself free movement on the axle. It sounds like the magnets are pulling the stator around within some tight tolerances that the bearings or covers are allowing through the rotation and one of the three are knocking. The motor still felt "tight" on the axle with respect to free movement from side to side and in any unintended direction. It is important to note that there has not been a discernible change to this with either of the 2 wheels and motors. The one I currently have still feels true and tight which leads me to believe maybe the stator is moving on the axle.I have read numerous posts regarding MP and Smart Pie hubs with bearing preload issues but have not seen a post regarding new hubs and the old posts no longer have video or audio attached so I can't compare. The first hub motor I did not open myself and it was taken to GM Canada. I included the video of the hub knocking in my support ticket correspondence with them but they determined it had "no issues" and that I needed to keep my spoke tension in check. They issued a full refund. As the bearing preload issue has been discussed many times, I feel very discouraged having 2 hubs experience severe knocking within a 4 week period on new hubs.
https://youtu.be/eNyXze2GE3Q This is the second motor, today, as fitted on the bike. I removed the brake caliper to eliminate question of it's spacing with the hub. I have checked and tested with no caliper or cooling cover installed and still, the same noise. The noise is present whether under human power, electric power, or no power just rolling, even in free air as shown in the last video.
Installation information and other details:
Two torque arms were installed, one on each side of the frame. The frame would not accommodate the correct orientation of the torquearm on one side so it had to be installed in the opposite orientation, while the other torque arm is installed as descibed in grin's installation diagram. Neither of the torquearms come within less than a centimeter of any moving parts and have no contact with anything unintended during operation.
Equivalent washers (one inside and one outside of the dropout) and torque arms are installed on both sides of the axle and the wheel appears centered and true upon installation in this manner. There were no fitment issues regarding the drivetrain components and the freewheel was supplied by the kit.
The rear was fitted with a 160mm tekro novela brake disc and the associated caliper. The spacing between the caliper housing and the MP5 cooling fin cover is tight (between 3-6mm) but even with the frame loaded with the rider the caliper remained the same distance from the MP5. Also, the disc brake rotor screws are not making contact with the vector controller and both hubs have been tested with the rotor, cooling cover and controller removed entirely.
The kit installed with
LCD display,
PAS sensor (not installed)
Thumb throttle
MP5 with Vector controller
7 speed shimano freewheel
2x grin torqarm v4
52V 11.6AH Shark Pack
Has anyone experienced issues like this with new hubs?
Thanks for your help!
-BCC