Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Pedelecs Electric Bike Community

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

DWG22 Motor noise

Featured Replies

Hi

Recently insalled a DWG22 kit from Woosh. The motor was exceptionally noisy and harsh under load on any setting higher than level 1. Andy at woosh kindly sent out a replacement motor wheel after listening to recording of noise. Replacement motor was a little smoother and less noisy when initially installed but is now almost as noisy as the original after 100 miles. I would be very interested to hear any feedback from owners of this kit. I have only seen favorable comments on the forum and no mention of undue noise. Love the way it rides shame about the noise (Stuka/Qualcast),

I suppose it could be a faulty batch, I would be interested to hear if anyone has experienced the same problem.

Thanks

Steve

20220505_122737.thumb.jpg.6731ad9f2c10c2f211a2a45cc389c153.jpg

Hi

Recently insalled a DWG22 kit from Woosh. The motor was exceptionally noisy and harsh under load on any setting higher than level 1. Andy at woosh kindly sent out a replacement motor wheel after listening to recording of noise. Replacement motor was a little smoother and less noisy when initially installed but is now almost as noisy as the original after 100 miles. I would be very interested to hear any feedback from owners of this kit. I have only seen favorable comments on the forum and no mention of undue noise. Love the way it rides shame about the noise (Stuka/Qualcast),

I suppose it could be a faulty batch, I would be interested to hear if anyone has experienced the same problem.

Thanks

Steve

I have a DWG22 kit fitted to a tandem and also to a solo machine. In both cases the motor is very quiet and smooth. As you would expect there is some motor noise, but it is of little consequence. You can hear when the motor is providing power, but it is quite a subtle whine and hardly noticeable when riding the bike.

 

BTW: Neat torque arm installation!

  • Author

I have a DWG22 kit fitted to a tandem and also to a solo machine. In both cases the motor is very quiet and smooth. As you would expect there is some motor noise, but it is of little consequence. You can hear when the motor is providing power, but it is quite a subtle whine and hardly noticeable when riding the bike.

 

BTW: Neat torque arm installation!

Hi Jodel

Thanks for the reply, I guess I have just been unlucky. I have other hub drive bikes and they sound as you describe, normal and acceptable. With this kit i have pedestrians looking to see where the milk float whine is coming from, makes for a tiring experience. Will probably end up changing the motor for something quieter.

  • Author
[quote name='Steve J H'] Hi Jodel Thanks for the reply, I guess I have just been unlucky. I have other hub drive bikes and they sound as you describe, normal and acceptable. With this kit i have pedestrians looking to see where the milk float whine is coming from, makes for a tiring experience. Will probably end up changing the motor for something quieter. [/QUOTE] [quote name='Steve J H'] Hi Jodel Thanks for the reply, I guess I have just been unlucky. I have other hub drive bikes and they sound as you describe, normal and acceptable. With this kit i have pedestrians looking to see where the milk float whine is coming from, makes for a tiring experience. Will probably end up changing the motor for something quieter. [/QUOTE]
  • Author
















































Hi All

Trying to upload an audio file to forum, getting error message saying file extension not recognised. Tried mp3, mp4 all rejected, anyone know what the correct extension/format should be.

Steve - try uploading your audio file to a site like 'Dropbox' and then posting a link here. I think I did something similar when trying to identify a clicking noise from my wheel (it was spoke noise).
  • Author

Steve - try uploading your audio file to a site like 'Dropbox' and then posting a link here. I think I did something similar when trying to identify a clicking noise from my wheel (it was spoke noise).

Thanks, will get on the case tomorrow. Would like to know what you think after listening and comparing with your own.

Hmm, was going to buy this kit when the batteries are back in stock. Kind of worrying that 2 out of 2 may be duff...

 

Guessing you have not got to the bottom of this? If it is a bad batch, there may be a fair chance of me getting a dud as well. How long ago did you order the kit, I think the 48v batteries have been OOS for a while?

 

[mention=29130]Jodel[/mention], did you ever solve the ticking noise? I think my old motor had a tick, definitely sounded like something loose that moved position every rotation of the wheel. Worked fine though...just listened to your upload and that tick appears to be very loud - sounds like a spoke to me but I'm no expert and you checked the spokes, was it bearings, bent axle or something else?

 

As the 48v batteries are still not listed in stock then hopefully you will have an answer before I am able to order.

 

What is promising though is that Whoosh are responsive from a customer service perspective.

 

C

Edited by Bogmonster666

Bogmonster666 - the ticking noise turned out to be spoke noise. Surprising as all the spokes were tight and pretty uniform in tension - I checked them all with my tension meter. That said, that wheel was on the back of a tandem and subject to a lot more stress than a solo bike. Tandems are very hard on rear wheels. I broke two spokes at the J bend and decided to swap that wheel back to a solo bike. I have had no issues since. Plain gauge spokes are absolutely fine for solo bikes, but on a tandem I suspect the loading is too high given the state of our pock-marked road surfaces.

 

The original tandem DWG22C wheel I subsequently rebuilt with a heavy duty Ryde Sputnik rim, Sapim Strong spokes and laced it in a single cross pattern with all elbows out - it has been fine since. I used the 'Grin' bikes spoke length calculator and built the wheel as per their video guide using the single cross lacing / elbows out.

 

My first DWG22C wheel has now done 2.5 K miles on the tandem (around 160Kg all up weight) with no issues at all. I think Steve J H has been unfortunate as I've not heard of any other adverse feedback on this kit.

  • Author

Hmm, was going to buy this kit when the batteries are back in stock. Kind of worrying that 2 out of 2 may be duff...

 

Guessing you have not got to the bottom of this? If it is a bad batch, there may be a fair chance of me getting a dud as well. How long ago did you order the kit, I think the 48v batteries have been OOS for a while?

 

[mention=29130]Jodel[/mention], did you ever solve the ticking noise? I think my old motor had a tick, definitely sounded like something loose that moved position every rotation of the wheel. Worked fine though...just listened to your upload and that tick appears to be very loud - sounds like a spoke to me but I'm no expert and you checked the spokes, was it bearings, bent axle or something else?

 

As the 48v batteries are still not listed in stock then hopefully you will have an answer before I am able to order.

 

What is promising though is that Whoosh are responsive from a customer service perspective.

 

Hi

I have inserted a drop box link below, please let me know if it works OK.

Kit was ordered in April after looking at all other options. Rides great apart from the unaceptable noise, massive torque for a hub motor. Nice people at Woosh, Andy sent out a replacement motor when I informed him of the problem, unforunatly it is now almost as noisy as the original. I think all kits are bench tested , but not under load. It was nice to have a comparison from Jodel. It may be a faulty batch or just the way they are. Just trying to get as much info as possible before going back to Woosh. If unable to resolve the issue I will change the motor for something quieter.

 

https://www.dropbox.com/s/yth6f58s09cborg/DWG22%20Motor%20noise.m4a?dl=0

Hi

Recently insalled a DWG22 kit from Woosh. The motor was exceptionally noisy and harsh under load on any setting higher than level 1. Andy at woosh kindly sent out a replacement motor wheel after listening to recording of noise. Replacement motor was a little smoother and less noisy when initially installed but is now almost as noisy as the original after 100 miles. I would be very interested to hear any feedback from owners of this kit. I have only seen favorable comments on the forum and no mention of undue noise. Love the way it rides shame about the noise (Stuka/Qualcast),

I suppose it could be a faulty batch, I would be interested to hear if anyone has experienced the same problem.

Thanks

Steve

andy is on holiday until the end of the month.

I'll ask him about this when he gets back.

Hmm, was going to buy this kit when the batteries are back in stock. Kind of worrying that 2 out of 2 may be duff...

there is usually an explanation. When Andy gets back, I'll ask him to open up and take a look at the motor that has been returned.

There is only one issue that I know of: you must never use the motor where there is salty sea spray. The salt in the water will corrode more or less instantly all the ball bearings and anything made with iron like the rotor. This is true for all hub motors, not just the DWG22C.

You must never, ever ride your bike on sandy beaches.

  • Author

there is usually an explanation. When Andy gets back, I'll ask him to open up and take a look at the motor that has been returned.

There is only one issue that I know of: you must never use the motor where there is salty sea spray. The salt in the water will corrode more or less instantly all the ball bearings and anything made with iron like the rotor. This is true for all hub motors, not just the DWG22C.

You must never, ever ride your bike on sandy beaches.

  • Author

Bogmonster666 - the ticking noise turned out to be spoke noise. Surprising as all the spokes were tight and pretty uniform in tension - I checked them all with my tension meter. That said, that wheel was on the back of a tandem and subject to a lot more stress than a solo bike. Tandems are very hard on rear wheels. I broke two spokes at the J bend and decided to swap that wheel back to a solo bike. I have had no issues since. Plain gauge spokes are absolutely fine for solo bikes, but on a tandem I suspect the loading is too high given the state of our pock-marked road surfaces.

 

The original tandem DWG22C wheel I subsequently rebuilt with a heavy duty Ryde Sputnik rim, Sapim Strong spokes and laced it in a single cross pattern with all elbows out - it has been fine since. I used the 'Grin' bikes spoke length calculator and built the wheel as per their video guide using the single cross lacing / elbows out.

 

My first DWG22C wheel has now done 2.5 K miles on the tandem (around 160Kg all up weight) with no issues at all. I think Steve J H has been unfortunate as I've not heard of any other adverse feedback on this kit.

Bogmonster666 - the ticking noise turned out to be spoke noise. Surprising as all the spokes were tight and pretty uniform in tension - I checked them all with my tension meter. That said, that wheel was on the back of a tandem and subject to a lot more stress than a solo bike. Tandems are very hard on rear wheels. I broke two spokes at the J bend and decided to swap that wheel back to a solo bike. I have had no issues since. Plain gauge spokes are absolutely fine for solo bikes, but on a tandem I suspect the loading is too high given the state of our pock-marked road surfaces.

 

The original tandem DWG22C wheel I subsequently rebuilt with a heavy duty Ryde Sputnik rim, Sapim Strong spokes and laced it in a single cross pattern with all elbows out - it has been fine since. I used the 'Grin' bikes spoke length calculator and built the wheel as per their video guide using the single cross lacing / elbows out.

 

My first DWG22C wheel has now done 2.5 K miles on the tandem (around 160Kg all up weight) with no issues at all. I think Steve J H has been unfortunate as I've not heard of any other adverse feedback on this kit.

Bogmonster666 - the ticking noise turned out to be spoke noise. Surprising as all the spokes were tight and pretty uniform in tension - I checked them all with my tension meter. That said, that wheel was on the back of a tandem and subject to a lot more stress than a solo bike. Tandems are very hard on rear wheels. I broke two spokes at the J bend and decided to swap that wheel back to a solo bike. I have had no issues since. Plain gauge spokes are absolutely fine for solo bikes, but on a tandem I suspect the loading is too high given the state of our pock-marked road surfaces.

 

The original tandem DWG22C wheel I subsequently rebuilt with a heavy duty Ryde Sputnik rim, Sapim Strong spokes and laced it in a single cross pattern with all elbows out - it has been fine since. I used the 'Grin' bikes spoke length calculator and built the wheel as per their video guide using the single cross lacing / elbows out.

 

My first DWG22C wheel has now done 2.5 K miles on the tandem (around 160Kg all up weight) with no issues at all. I think Steve J H has been unfortunate as I've not heard of any other adverse feedback on this kit.

That is certainly promising. I was also interested in people reporting bent axles but given your use on a tandem then I think I have little to fear. I won't be off roading and hopping kerbs at speed and that kind of abuse and I'm not tandem weight on my tod...but the holes in the road are a little harder to avoid around here...

there is usually an explanation. When Andy gets back, I'll ask him to open up and take a look at the motor that has been returned.

There is only one issue that I know of: you must never use the motor where there is salty sea spray. The salt in the water will corrode more or less instantly all the ball bearings and anything made with iron like the rotor. This is true for all hub motors, not just the DWG22C.

You must never, ever ride your bike on sandy beaches.

I'm still going to buy this kit I am sure. I'm sure there is a good explanation and just as important, after sales service. I won't be riding on any beaches or through the sea :). If the sea rises to the 900' elevation where I live then a knackered motor will be the least of my issues. Salted roads in the winter and cold temps may be a bigger issue for me though. They don't salt the roads around here much for better of for worse...

  • Author

Hi

I have inserted a drop box link below, please let me know if it works OK.

Kit was ordered in April after looking at all other options. Rides great apart from the unaceptable noise, very responsive massive torque for a hub motor. Nice people at Woosh, Andy sent out a replacement motor when I informed him of the problem, unforunatly it is now almost as noisy as the original. I think all kits are bench tested , but not under load. It was nice to have a comparison from Jodel. It may be a faulty batch or just the way they are. Just trying to get as much info as possible before going back to Woosh. If unable to resolve the issue I will change the motor for something quieter.

 

https://www.dropbox.com/s/yth6f58s09cborg/DWG22%20Motor%20noise.m4a?dl=0

the noise comes from the friction of the 4 ballbearings around the motor's axle.

As the load increases, the friction increases so does the noise.

Without a load reference, I could not make any deduction from the sound track, whether your ballbearings are shot or not. When Andy comes back from holiday, I will ask him to open up the motor you sent back and check the state of the ball bearings and let you know what we find, if any of the bearings needs replacing.

Motors like the DWG22C need a new set of bearings after about 3,000-4,000 miles, not 100 miles. You can open the motor to take a look if you so wish, that does not affect your warranty.

I had a listen to your audio file and the characteristics of the noise are very similar to my own two motors. What is more difficult to judge remotely is the volume level. I find my motors to be very quiet - not silent, but perfectly acceptable. The problem is that my definition of 'quiet' might be your deafening roar!

 

By way of illustration, I'd say the noise of the motor is at a similar level (or slightly louder) than the 'thrum' of a smooth tread road tyre and certainly less than that of a knobby tread mountain bike tyre when used on tarmac. I have Schwalbe Marathon Plus tyres on my bikes and they roll fairly smoothly and quietly.

 

Woosh - interesting to know about potential bearing replacement. I've got 2.5k miles on the tandem wheel and it has no untoward noises or any sign of play in the bearings. The bearings themselves look a lot more substantial than ordinary freehub bearings too. I'm very much a fair weather cyclist these days though, so my bikes are not subject to all weather use.

Sounds like an intermittent metallic grating noise as well as the whine or did I image that or was that noise something unrelated altogether?

 

The noise is at 10 seconds and 48 seconds for example.

Edited by Bogmonster666

  • Author

the noise comes from the friction of the 4 ballbearings around the motor's axle.

As the load increases, the friction increases so does the noise.

Without a load reference, I could not make any deduction whether your ballbearings are shot or not. When Andy comes back from holiday, I will ask him to open up the motor you sent back and check the state of the ball bearings.

Motors like the DWG22C need a new set of bearings after about 3,000-4,000 miles, not 100 miles.

Thanks

I had a listen to your audio file and the characteristics of the noise are very similar to my own two motors. What is more difficult to judge remotely is the volume level. I find my motors to be very quiet - not silent, but perfectly acceptable. The problem is that my definition of 'quiet' might be your deafening roar!

 

By way of illustration, I'd say the noise of the motor is at a similar level (or slightly louder) than the 'thrum' of a smooth tread road tyre and certainly less than that of a knobby tread mountain bike tyre when used on tarmac. I have Schwalbe Marathon Plus tyres on my bikes and they roll fairly smoothly and quietly.

 

Woosh - interesting to know about potential bearing replacement. I've got 2.5k miles on the tandem wheel and it has no untoward noises or any sign of play in the bearings. The bearings themselves look a lot more substantial than ordinary freehub bearings too. I'm very much a fair weather cyclist these days though, so my bikes are not subject to all weather use.

  • Author

Thanks

I know noise is very subjective and personal perception varies. All I can measure it against are my other bikes and builds, Bafang BBS01, ancient High mileage Yosepower & Fiido DS4 (unbranded Chinese motor). All these are near silent in comparison. Woosh will look into the issue and I will keep you posted on the outcome.

Woosh - interesting to know about potential bearing replacement. I've got 2.5k miles on the tandem wheel and it has no untoward noises or any sign of play in the bearings. The bearings themselves look a lot more substantial than ordinary freehub bearings too. I'm very much a fair weather cyclist these days though, so my bikes are not subject to all weather use.

I will take a look and let you know the part numbers when Andy opens Steve's returned motor.

  • 4 weeks later...

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...
Background Picker
Customize Layout

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.