Hi and
to the forum.
I've not come across that noise before but I also think it is more likely to be an electrical problem than a mechanical one.
If the noise/vibration doesn't occur with a freshly charged battery, it could be the battery's
BMS rapidly switching the power On and Off caused by a weak cell
(or a group of weak paralleled cells) as the cell voltage drops under load.
As soon as the
BMS cuts the voltage, the voltage of the weak cell instantly rises allowing the
BMS to supply power again, and I suspect this may be happening at the same frequency as the noise/vibration.
Temporarily connecting a wire between the B- and P- of the
BMS should confirm if my suspicions are correct. If the fault disappears, then the fault is either a weak cell/cell group or a faulty
BMS.
If the battery is also 7 years old, I think a weak cell/cell group is probably the most likely cause.
However, if the fault still remains with the
BMS bypassed, it could be a controller fault, something on the electrical system interfering with the operation of the controller, or perhaps it is a mechanical fault.
I've seen
pictures of a cracked stator on an MPII with an external controller but I've not seen this failure on a MP4 and I'm not even sure if it would cause the same noise/vibration, but it might be worth taking a cover off and having a look inside if you can't locate an electrical fault.
Please let us know what the outcome is.
Alan