Power stage. I find great difficulties building this, there is so much information - I will try to break it down into easy steps.
I'm building a highly efficient controller, heat generated in the mosfets really shouldn't be high in the first place. Switches will be hard and inductive backspikes will be nasty. Measures to decrease inductive spikes include making my own motor wire. It will be the kind of 155C enameled copper wire and braided in a way such that the wires come really close, reducing inductance. Further on the controller will be fitted close to the motor (20 cm ish), to decrease it more.
More calculations on inductive spikes will come here.
IRFS4115 mosfets will be used. There are other candidates, but given the fully characterized capacitance and avalanche data, this is nice to calculate on.
IRLML6344 is a small SOT-23 mosfet, (I think) ideal for driving the power mosfets. More research.
I want to outfit every power stage with individual drive mosfets, so that adding more for more power is easy. I've planned on a basic 12fet setup - power should already be plentiful only with one board.
IRFB3077 mosfets, 75V, low Rds on, high current rating and appropriate casing. - maybe I'll use this
Aluminium heatsinks (connected directly to Drain) will work as "DC+" and "A", "B" and "C" for easy connection and minimal pcb current transport. Ultiboard, paint and later on solidworks sketches will come

Voltage regulator: To be done
Cap choices: to be done.
This document explains why I'm not going "1F" electrolytic with crappy ESR. Maybe higher switching frequency will be used to lower capacitance needed. Trying to find good data on motor inductance, anyone care to give me a ball-park figure?
This topic gives me a ballpark figure of about 20uH for big outrunners, but I guess hubbies are another story?
Low ESR, Fact or Fiction, nice paper on film and electrolytic capacitors. Interesting to see that a "low inductance" cap would probably work better than a "low ESR" one.
Current sensing:
SMD Vishay, new stuff. Good for 1W and 0,005 ohm. Op-amps and stuff will be covered later.