Burned cyclone controller! Help needed please.

Kaño

1 W
Joined
Apr 8, 2009
Messages
55
Hi,

I´m from Argentina, and this is my first post here so hello to all of you! , anyway, this is what happened:

I bought a cyclone 1000w kit a while a go, an never used it, last week I decided to installed it to my custom chopper and see what is like to "electraglide" 8)

Took it for a ride around the block and the controller hot quite hot, then it stops pulling the motor. Since I hook it up to four 12v 12 amp sla batteries I thought I could have drain them already. So back to home pedaling with Eddie’s current friend making it feel like if a dead cow was tight to my chopper. Once at home I recharged my batteries, (in less than an hour! so or Paco send me some fusion reactors chargers or something was not right..) took the battery pack to my bike, plug it in and.... puffff, smoke and bad smell from that shiny box.

The thing is, I don’t know a thing about electronics, so:

1 Could the controller be repaired?

2 Any idea of what could have happened?

Thanks for looking!
 
I also have the Cyclone 1000w kit and have upgraded the controller's elecronics it so i know the insides fairly well. The casing has little thermal mass so if your motor is not geared down enough the controller quickly overheats due to the high current demand being placed on it (The over-temperature sensor doesnt kick in soon enough). However when the motor is geared down enough that it run's at about 2000>3000rpm the standard controller runs fine without overheating.

The main flaw with the standard kit is that it doesnt allow enough gear-reduction to the cranks. So the mistake many people make is assume that the motor is operating happily when their pedal cadence compliments the motors power whilst riding. The standard gear reduction is 6T>44T or 7.33:1 which when pedalling at 85rpm is 623rpm that the motor is spinning at. At this speed the motor feels quite torquey but it is pulling huge current and running very inefficiently. This is what causes the standard motor controller to heat up quickly and to blow if driven this way for too long. This problem is relieved somewhat if your bike has smaller wheels (20") and you use the bikes gearing exlusively to keep the motor spinning fast, however the pedals are effectively useless this way which is why many users of the 1000watt kits blow the controllers often. (The other kits with the planetary gearboxes dont suffer these problems because they haver greater gear reduction and effectively match the riders natural pedal cadence (9.55:1 planetary x 44T/14T=3.14:1) = 30:1 overall reduction (2550rpm/30 = 85rpm)

Anyway back to the problem;
Open up the casing and look for anything burnt or busted. Take some close up pictures of the PCB and post them up if your not sure. The mosfets in these controllers ar largely hidden from view with the cover off so you cant really check for visible damage without removing the PCB from the extruded alluminium casing and flipping it over.
The standard mosfets are rated to 75V so it would be unlikely that 4 freshly charged Pb-Acid batteries would exceed their voltage range. (sealed type Lead acid: 2.45--2.5V/cell *24cells=58.8-60V). It is far more likely that you overheated the controller during your ride and cooked the fets, which then went puff when you applied the higher voltage of freshly charged batteries. There are 6 Fets and they cost about $7 each to replace if you are decent with a soldering iron, but you need to know which ones are damaged and be sure the rest of the circuitry is ok.
 
Hey boostjuice, I am thinking about getting a cyclone kit, can you give any more tips about them? Is it so simple as: >1kw = frying the controller and <1kw = your ok? Does the 900 watt motor they offer have the planetary gears? They don't give this information on their website. Can you get the higher wattage motor and just buy a higher quality controller from somewhere else?
 
Boostjuice, Thank you for your answer! you know that was just what I did!( are you the Oracle? :shock: ) I ride my bike, pedaling, using little throttle and saying: wow what a nice torque! :oops:

I really don´t know anything about electronics, I will contact a technician and tell him what you just tell me, so he can repair the thing.

I have my motor installed directly to the chain drive so imagine at how low rpm it was spinning! Nonetheless for the brief moment I tried my electraglide, it was suffice to fall in love with this stuff, so as soon as it is operational again, I will install all back, but with another gear ratio. :mrgreen:
 
Muad'dib said:
Hey boostjuice, I am thinking about getting a cyclone kit, can you give any more tips about them? Is it so simple as: >1kw = frying the controller and <1kw = your ok? Does the 900 watt motor they offer have the planetary gears? They don't give this information on their website. Can you get the higher wattage motor and just buy a higher quality controller from somewhere else?

It's not about the motor controller being undersized for the power demands of the motor (although the big Cyclone motors can safely produce much more power with upgraded controllers, such as their 3000watt kit which simply includes a 100A kelly controller), rather its about gearing the motor correctly so it doesn't inefficiently and consistantly draw massive current from the controller that it is only turning into heat, not rotational energy, at low rpm. The standard controller is current limited to about 55A, but if it provides this for more than short bursts (such as accelerating from a standstill), the heatsinking ability of the controller casing is swamped and the MOSFETS overheat. So while the controller can provide dynamic bursts of >2600W, it cannot sustain this without failure. That is why on the cyclone website it states "Controller will burn if overloaded for more than 30 secs".
They know the non-planetary gearbox motors are not geared down enough for most bikes but they cant seem to think of any cheap and simple way of providing the extra reduction required. Gearing that isnt just sprockets and chains cost big money relative to the total kit price, and the planetary gearboxes used with the smaller motors cannot tolerate the torque provided by the big motors. IMHO What they really should do is incorporate a second jackshaft with the motor mounting bracket and have a two stage belt/chain reduction which is what i would suggest anyone fabricate who is in Kaño's situation.

This custom made extra gear reduction is a cheap way to make the non-planetary gearbox motors work effectively with the riders natural pedal cadence, especially on 26" wheeled bikes which have a lower wheel rpm to speed ratio.

My suggestion would be something like this;
Cyclonemod.JPG


If a bottom bracket shell was welded or clamped onto the downtube, then a bottom bracket could be installed as the jackshaft and sprockets/pulleys could be easily built on this to form a second reduction stage. Another alternative would be to fabricate an downward extending motor bracket out of alluminium channel whereby a jackshaft of some sort could be installed through it. Overall you need about a 30:1 reduction, and a first stage belt drive would be prefferable to cut down on noise, but i am unsure whether a belt strong enough to take the torque would not be really wide and intrude on the pedal stroke. If chain was used for both stages, you could use a larger motor sprocket which would reduce high rpm chain noise during the 1st stage. If using chain, something like 10T>44T 1st stage, then 6T>44T second stage gives 32.26:1 overall reduction which would be appropriate, but proabably still quite noisy.
The sweetspot for the motor is 2200rpm, so 2200/32.26 = a comfortable 68rpm pedal cadence to match the motors 'happy' speed.

Personally, to gain the required extra reduction and avoid the need to downgrade my sealed cartridge bearing Bottom bracket to the cup&ball-cock-legged-long-spindle version included with the kit i have done major re-engineering with my bike. Basically whilst i love the power and quality of my large cyclone motor and controller, i hate the design and bad quality of the rest of the kit which i have discarded it in favour of a complicated but effective alternative. Unfortunately my solution is impractical and overly expensive for 99% of people but you can see what ive done over here;
http://www.endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=7558&p=114161&hilit=cyclone#p114161

The two motor styles offered by Cyclone both have their pro's and cons. To make matters worse, their overlapping power ratings between the motor casing sizes makes things confusing. The power range of their planetery geared motors goes up to 1200W according to their website. I suspect that all their planetary motors have the same motor but with varying ratings of the internal/external motor controllers, or at least different current limits. The higher power rated planetary motors are also reported to often overheat and temporarily shutdown because the smaller thermal mass, poor cooling and integrated controller swamps them with heat so quickly. Again, they know about this problem because they are now offering these for sale....
cooling-fin.jpg


cyclone-motor-180w.jpg

The planetary box motors

PRO's
-More compact,
-The replacement pedal spindle in not as long as for the larger motors and is more symetrical in its extension either side of the frame
-integration of the gearbox, freewheel and controller into the one casing/unit makes them easier to mount on varying bike frames
-Offers the required reduction to operate efficiently whilst complimenting the riders natural pedal cadence.
-lighterweight
CON's
-More susceptible to overheating the internal motor controller as the circuitry is exposed to the motor's heat as well.
-Controller not upgradable (Well not easily)
-Noisy, (not that the larger motors dont suffer from high rpm chain noise in their standard kit configuration)



Cyclone1kwmotor.JPG

The Larger Non Planetary Motors

The larger motor casing sized kits are rated 1000W>3000W depending on the controller sent with the kit. The 1000W kits contain a controller made by Headline Motors taiwan and is probably what they consider the safe/conservative limit for the motor which is also made by them. However Cyclone soon realised they could take much more current than the Headline controller could provide and so started selling kits with varying Kelly controllers which provide more current.
http://www.kellycontroller.com/shop/?mod=cat&cat_id=41,22

PRO's
-Higher power and torque!
-Greater power potential from upgraded controllers
-greater thermal mass means it can sustain heavy loading longer
-external controller means heat from the controller and motor are not thermally coupled.
-Can be less noisy if setup in a custom manner (no planetary box "that sounds like a sick wasp on crack" to quote another ES member)

CON's
-Heavier and larger, means less places to mount it
-A longer and more unsymetrical pedal spindle required to mount in the standard location (due to the longer motor barrel length)
-Custom fabrication required to setup effectively on an large wheeled bikes where you want to pedal assist.

PS: if you look at the photo's on the cyclone website, the majority of the bikes with the 1000W+ kits are installed on 20" wheeled bikes whereby the pedals are effectively useless for assisting the motor as the ratio's are all wrong.
1000Wb1.jpg

1000FD.jpg

1000Wbike.jpg

100W3s.jpg
 
boostjuice, very nice and useful info! :p

Just ordered a 500W cyclone kit for my chopper, it will simpler to install and to learn the "how to" of electric bikes. Once my 48V 35A controller gets repaired, I will start thinking of a new setup for my bike.

Actually, my bike is equipped with a jackshaft I use with my gas engine, in order to take advantage of my nexus rear hub. Perhaps I could adapt the jackshaft to be use with the 1000w motor, but that would happen when I can afford some king of Ping batteries.

Right now I’m using 4 12v 12ah SLA, do you think it would be possible to connect two car Audio 12V 2Faradios capacitors in series to have a 24V capacitor 2F bank to help my sla pack with the new 500w motor witch I read it could take peaks of up to 1000w?
 
You could connect 2 2F caps in series to get a 24v 1F cap. When a pair of caps go in series, the capacitance is cut in half. If you are going to be running poor quality lead acid batteries, it could help hold voltage for 1-2 seconds, but it's going to do very little beyond that. 1F of cap at 24v amounts to a whole lot of nothing as far as energy goes, but it could help keep voltage stable for short periods of time.
 
Bootjuice, are you saying that the rpms were too fast and that's how it blew the controller or it was too slow? Nevermind, I see. It was only going 600 rpms so it was too slow and that's how it blew. It needs 2000 rpm.
 
Back
Top