Now, when power is applied to the motor battery leads, I get a short circuit arc.
A momentary spark when the battery is first connected is quite normal, but if the spark is big enough to melt the ends of the wires then there is definitely a problem somewhere. Try connecting through a 5 or 10 amp fuse and see if the fuse blows. If it doesn't blow, then you probably don't have a short circuit in the controller.
The typical spark experienced when connecting the battery is due to a sudden high inrush current flowing from the battery to the controller as it instantly charges up the controller's capacitors from 0V to full battery voltage in a fraction of a second.
Which
Magic Pie do you have? I presume your motor has an internal controller?
Bottom line, should I replace the controller, so the controller wires will be good? Can the controller wires be replaced by Golden Motors? What is the likelihood, the controller has been fried due to the splicing?
If the controller is dead, you will obviously have to replace the controller, but you would then have to cut the wires to splice it into the existing wiring, or fit a new control harness, brake levers, throttle and cruise button assembly.
It's impossible to say whether the controller has been fried due to the splicing without carefully inspecting and tracing all of the wiring.
I haven't seen the controller wiring harness being sold separately and I don't think GM offer a service where they would replace just the cable on your controller, but if it's available separately and it was replaced, you would still need to use a new control harness, brake levers, throttle and cruise button assembly if you want to avoid cutting the new controller harness.
If the wires have been spliced correctly to the correct wires on the bike
(and they are properly insulated) it should not cause a problem, but if they have been spliced incorrectly to the wrong wires on the bike
(or the connections are poorly insulated from each other) then it could possibly have caused damage to the controller and possibly the Hall sensors in the motor and/or the throttle unit as well.
As the bike has been running "
most of the time", I suspect that the wires must have been spliced into the correct wires at some stage, but as we have no pictures of the affected wiring, or informative details of your bike, and don't even know which Magic Pie has been fitted or how it has been wired into the bike's existing wiring, it is difficult to offer specific advice.
Is there any indication on the bike when the battery power is on, and if so, does it remain on when the motor stops, or does battery power disappear when the motor stops?
Could it be a poor battery connection or a power switch problem?
Alan