D
Deleted member 4366
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The thin white wire is spare unless there's a teperature sensor in the motor. You can check with a resistance meter. If it's open-circuit, clearly not connected. If it has resistance, there's a sensor. I reckon open circuit.
Looks like you got a slightly different throttle to normal. Yellow is for the LEDs and goes to any battery +ve.
There will be no problem leaving the brakes disconnected other than safety.
The high voltage brake wire is one that requires 5v to switch the controller off. If you were using the alarm output of some monitoring device, it might be useful. All normal switches including those hidden wire ones go low (0v).
You have the bits to make a battery connector adapter. Solder a thick piece of wire to each side of the kettle socket. Chuck the screws, they only get in the way. Solder the other ends to a couple of those spades with the white connector. Solder a short thinner wire from the red spade to the third spade. Clip the spades in to the corresponding places in the white housing. Check very carefully that you have +36v on the side that connects to the thick red controller wire before connecting. If you get it wrong, you'll need a new controller.
The two anti-rotation washers go on the inside of the drop-outs.
You haven't got your free-wheel on yet, which is why you appear to have a lot of space!
When you've fitted the free-wheel, make sure that you have long enough spacers up the middle that it doesn't get clamped when you do up the wheel-nut. You shouldn't need to cut anything unless you want to change to single-speed.
Looks like you got a slightly different throttle to normal. Yellow is for the LEDs and goes to any battery +ve.
There will be no problem leaving the brakes disconnected other than safety.
The high voltage brake wire is one that requires 5v to switch the controller off. If you were using the alarm output of some monitoring device, it might be useful. All normal switches including those hidden wire ones go low (0v).
You have the bits to make a battery connector adapter. Solder a thick piece of wire to each side of the kettle socket. Chuck the screws, they only get in the way. Solder the other ends to a couple of those spades with the white connector. Solder a short thinner wire from the red spade to the third spade. Clip the spades in to the corresponding places in the white housing. Check very carefully that you have +36v on the side that connects to the thick red controller wire before connecting. If you get it wrong, you'll need a new controller.
The two anti-rotation washers go on the inside of the drop-outs.
You haven't got your free-wheel on yet, which is why you appear to have a lot of space!
When you've fitted the free-wheel, make sure that you have long enough spacers up the middle that it doesn't get clamped when you do up the wheel-nut. You shouldn't need to cut anything unless you want to change to single-speed.