
Why Sensor Placement Isn’t Cosmetic: Real Impacts on Ride and Data
In the electric bike world, sensors are the unseen brain behind pedal assist. Yet many brands overlook a crucial fact:
It’s not just whether a sensor exists—it’s where and how it’s placed.
From torque sensors to cadence detectors, brake sensors to motor temperature probes, correct placement and calibration during the manufacturing stage can drastically improve:
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Ride smoothness
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Assist responsiveness
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Component lifespan
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Battery efficiency
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Post-sale data accuracy
At Jobo, we’ve seen firsthand how flawed integration—even with top-tier parts—leads to product complaints, field returns, and lost brand trust.
What Can Go Wrong with Poor Sensor Placement?
| Sensor Type | Common Mistake | Resulting Issue |
|---|---|---|
| Torque sensor | Misaligned in crank axis | Erratic power delivery, jerky acceleration |
| Cadence sensor | Loose magnet alignment | Delayed PAS activation or stuttered assist |
| Brake sensor | Inconsistent wiring pressure | Intermittent motor cutoff during braking |
| Temp sensors | Placed outside thermal zone | Inaccurate data = poor thermal control |
| Hall sensors | Slight misrotation in hub | False motor position readings, power dropouts |
These aren't just “tuning issues”—they’re manufacturing failures.
How Jobo Handles Sensor Integration in OEM Builds
1. Pre-Mounting Geometry Control
At Jobo, sensor placement begins during frame and system design:
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Torque sensors are aligned with bottom bracket spindle axis for accurate force readings
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Cable routing preserves clean tension paths to reduce lag
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Mounting points are CNC-aligned to drivetrain angles
Every Jobo ebike with PAS uses pre-defined geometry profiles to ensure sensor-data consistency across batches.
2. Dynamic Testing During Assembly
We don’t rely solely on bench calibration. Sensors are tested under real pedaling loads:
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Cadence sensors verified at 3–5 rpm thresholds
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Torque sensors benchmarked under variable crank pressure
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Brake sensors tested with lever travel tolerances and full system cutoff activation
This prevents dead zones or ghost power—critical in commercial and fleet-use environments.
3. Firmware + Sensor Sync
Jobo ensures each sensor’s behavior is matched to:
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Controller firmware version
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Assist profiles (Eco, Normal, Power)
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Battery output curves
This integration-first approach allows smoother power delivery, fewer overheating issues, and cleaner post-ride telemetry—a growing need for fleet managers and smart mobility operators.
Who It Matters For
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Fleet buyers who need predictable assist behavior across hundreds of units
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Retail brands relying on positive ride feel and lower support tickets
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B2B operators needing data accuracy for tracking, billing, and warranty
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End users who expect safe, intuitive acceleration and braking
In all cases, sensor placement isn’t aesthetic—it’s functional.
FAQ: Brands Ask This Before Going OEM
Q1: Can you integrate custom sensor kits or third-party systems?
Yes. Jobo can incorporate sensors from approved vendors, and adjust placement/mounts for compatibility.
Q2: How do you ensure alignment when scaling up production?
We use standardized jigs, laser markers, and pre-calibrated torque tools to replicate sensor install points across large batches.
Q3: Do you validate sensor data per unit or per batch?
We run per-unit validation for all torque/cadence systems, especially in fleet or mid-drive configurations.
Better Sensor Placement Means Better Bikes
If you're building an e-bike brand—or managing a growing fleet—you can't afford to overlook what happens under the plastic casing.
Sensor precision is ride precision.
And ride precision builds loyalty.
At Jobo, we engineer sensor placement with the same care as frame welding or battery sealing—because the smallest parts often make the biggest difference.
Explore Jobo’s OEM systems
Talk to our production team about integration precision







