Covering this part separately cuz the other post was already long.
Hi, I'm working on an old cargo bike that I want to add a rear hub motor to. I have an old Crystalyte 406 motor laying around that I want to use for now and two 36V batteries I'd like to repurpose.
How heavy is the bike plus you plus the worst-case cargo you have to carry back up?
How steep is the hill? And how long? Any winds?
What speed do you ahve to maintain going back up?
What speed does the motor normally spin at for 36v when on flat ground? (or unloaded offground)?
You can take all that data to the simulator at ebikes.ca to find out how much power it takes to do what you want, so you can answer some of the questions below:
Since you have a hill that has to go back up at the end of the ride, can that motor handle the power required to do that, for the total system/rider weight, for the minimum of 15 minutes it takes (probably longer going up than down), without overheating?
Can the batteries handle the current required to do it?
Do the batteries have the capacity to power you all the way back up that hill, after having ridden around? because you can't actually use any of the regenned capacity from the initial hill descent (see below).
The bike will be parked on a hill, so pretty much every ride will start with 15 minutes of riding downhill.
Covering this part separately cuz the other post was already long.
If you regen downhill at the start of every ride, you will need to setup your charging system to never charge to full, and always leave out more capacity than you will regenerate on the downhill.
If you start with a full battery, or nearly full, then at some point during the regen, your system will fill the battery, and the bms will turn off. When that happens, the load is removed from the regenned voltage, the voltage inside the controller will spike, probably well beyond what it's designed for, and it will probably blow up the FETs and the voltage regulator, perhaps the MCU or other parts. If the voltage regulator is a simple linear type, it may fail shorted, and pass the excessive voltage thru to the whole set of low voltage devices connected to the controller (PAS, throttle, motor halls, etc). If there's a display powered from the controller's battery voltage, it'll also be damaged by the spike.
So, the options are to not use a BMS (not safe, especially if you are regenning down a hill when it's already full), or to charge to less than full by *more* than the worst-case amoutn of regen you could get, so that it will *never* have a chance of the above situation.
EDITED 2-16-25 to clarify scenario:
If the BMS is a common-port type, that will mean the controller has nowhere to dump this current now, and it becomes a voltage that builds up (not like static electricity) very fast and can quickly exceed the voltage the controller FETs and other parts can handle, destroying them.
If the BMS is a separate-port type, then it can't stop the regen current, and the cells will begin overcharging. How serious this problem is depends on the length of time the regen goes on, and the amount of current flow there is. If it's a very low current, less than 50mA, it's likely that the BMS balancing shunts (if it is a balancing type) will handle it. Above that (whatever the shunts can do) the cells will charge.
If there is no BMS, the cells are "all" that is at risk, as those will still overcharge, but there's nothing to disconnect the controller from the battery and cause the voltage spike.