As you commented in your previous message... The contactor is controlled by the MBB???
Well, it's a very good question, after reviewing schematics for other Zero models for thousands of hours and the existing schematic for 2013; of course, also taking measurements on the motorcycle itself and disassembling it almost completely....... even so, it is not very clear to me "what controls what, when and how"; but I have some suspicions, if someone confirms or denies them, it would be a great advance.
I think the starting of the bike goes more or less in this order...the key switch connects a pin with B- to another pin on the MBB(red and white wire) to activate the ignition and I guess the mbb with "some voltage or signal" tells the bms to activate the contactor and sends "another signal" to the sevcom to activate the motor... but since I don't know what type of signal or voltage has to be produced for it to work or how the bms has to respond to activate the contactor i can't figure out the fault.
I deduce that my problem is in the bms because apart from the start-up, the charge also fails (onboard charger).
When I plug it in to charge, a soft click-click-click is heard in the lower area of ??the battery (where the charger is located) and it does not close the contactor to charge the battery.
From what I have been able to find out, I think that both when turning on and when charging, the mbb needs some type of response from the bms or vice versa and it is not happening... knowing the necessary voltages or signals could theoretically fool the mbb so that he believed that the bms is fine and turned everything on.
I have all kinds of measurements; with key switch on, off, in outputs and inputs of the bms, ccu, mbb, sevcom, contactor etc... if someone thinks they can help me I can provide all the information they need, as I mentioned in my first message there is a video on youtube of a 2015 zero ds working perfectly with the broken BMS and also marking an error on the board, simply canceling and replacing some signals, but it does not explain which signals it replaces (the person in the video had two bms motherboards, one in good condition and that is why he was able to know the necessary tensions) and does not respond to emails either