Not in time with the cranks but about every fourth rotation it clicks when under power
@dlrushing90 - good update, that changes the picture quite a bit.
Every fourth rotation rather than every rotation points away from the BB and cranks, and toward the drivetrain or the Dyname's internal drive system.
Here's why: the Instinct Powerplay's Dyname 4.0 uses a more complex chain path than a conventional mid-drive.
The system uses three separate chainrings and cogs - as you turn the cranks, chain tension pushes on a torque sensor pulley located directly above the chainring, which reads deflection via a hall effect sensor to determine how much power to apply.
That means there are multiple points in the drivetrain where a periodic click can originate - not just the cranks themselves.
What "every fourth rotation" most likely points to:
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A worn or damaged chainring tooth - a single bad tooth on a 34T ring at normal cadence would produce a click roughly every 2 - 4 crank rotations depending on chain length and gear selected. Classic "once every few revolutions under load" symptom.
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A stiff chain link - similarly periodic, worsens under power. Worth spinning the chain slowly by hand off the bike to feel for tight links.
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The torque sensor cog/pulley - this is a known weak point. There's a torque-sensing cog under the drive unit cover above the front chainring, and a lower idler wheel, which adds undeniable complexity.
If that cog or its bearing develops a rough spot, it'll click on a fixed interval as the chain cycles round. This one you can't check yourself - it's inside the motor cover.
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The one-way clutch/freewheel assembly - the Dyname 4.0 uses a clutch bearing freewheel on the crank spider.
Rocky Mountain have since moved away from this on the S4 Lite, replacing the clutch bearing assembly with a ratchet assembly (drive ring, pawls and springs) specifically to improve reliability and serviceability.
If the clutch bearing on your 4.0 is worn or dry, it can produce an intermittent click under load on a repeating cycle.
Practical next steps:
• Swap the chain and check for tight links first - takes ten minutes and rules out the obvious • Inspect the chainring teeth for a visibly worn or hooked tooth
• If those are clean, you'll need a dealer to pull the motor cover and inspect the torque sensor cog and freewheel assembly - repair of the drive unit should only be performed by an authorised Rocky Mountain service centre, so this isn't a home job
How many miles/km on the bike? That'll help narrow down whether the freewheel is the likely culprit.