Greetings all ES members.
As a long time reader on the forum, this will be my first post as the answer to a question is eluding me.
(sorry for the long intro post
)
So I am driving an E-Scooter with a 1000w hub, 48V 15Ah Headway pack and a generic cheap China square wave controller. The Headway pack has now startet to sag too much under load ( I mean more than a brand new Headway pack sags
, which is A Lot), so it has to go to an easier life now. Last year i got a huge pile of old stock Samsung 26F cells that i have made a 13S18P pack out of. They may be old (2012 supposedly) but they do deliver about 40ah so they seem fine. Now these Li-ion cells have a different discharge curve as the Headway Lifepo4, dropping in voltage according to SOC. An annoying observation I have now made, is that my speed is dropping according to battery voltage, and that is even with the speed limiter ON. I am running at a somewhat legal speed of 35 km/h (21mph) but I do have a speed switch that makes i go to around 45 km/h (set on my old Lifepo4 pack). With my new battery (54v fully charged) I start of at around 38 km/h and will end at some 28 km/h (~43v). Thats a full 10 km/h difference and that is just too much. I mean, pedal-people will start to overtake med at below 30 km/h
Naturally I blamed the no-name generic controller for not being able to regulate speed at different input voltages, so i decided to try out a programmable Kelly Sine wave controller that i got at a discount, fully knowing what many people think of the Kellys :wink: I have set i up with a 2-speed switch and programmed it to do about the same speeds as the old one, 35/45km/h. And behold, the exact same things happen. It also looses speed somewhat proportionally to the input voltage
So my real question is, do all controllers behave this way?? Because that actually slightly sucks. They all have speed sensing (Halls usually) so why is it not able to adjust the speed according to throttle position? I fully understand that running at whatever max speed the controller i able to do, the battery voltage will determine the top speed. But with the speed limiter ON, why does i still loose speed. I can push the high speed button at low battery and it will still go faster, so it is has the ability to do so.. Anyone with experience using different controllers this way?
Also, what controllers are good choices these days. It seems that brand names come and go relatively fast and some are next to impossible to actually by. And I am not planning on digging up $250 for a controller, that's just half the price of my entire ride. And I care nothing about silent butter-smooth running, so a good square wave controller is perfectly acceptable. I kind of like the clicky sound they make and people can hear 'something' coming
Acceleration from standstill i my primary concern. My Kelly i a KLS4812s btw.
As a long time reader on the forum, this will be my first post as the answer to a question is eluding me.
(sorry for the long intro post
So I am driving an E-Scooter with a 1000w hub, 48V 15Ah Headway pack and a generic cheap China square wave controller. The Headway pack has now startet to sag too much under load ( I mean more than a brand new Headway pack sags

Naturally I blamed the no-name generic controller for not being able to regulate speed at different input voltages, so i decided to try out a programmable Kelly Sine wave controller that i got at a discount, fully knowing what many people think of the Kellys :wink: I have set i up with a 2-speed switch and programmed it to do about the same speeds as the old one, 35/45km/h. And behold, the exact same things happen. It also looses speed somewhat proportionally to the input voltage
So my real question is, do all controllers behave this way?? Because that actually slightly sucks. They all have speed sensing (Halls usually) so why is it not able to adjust the speed according to throttle position? I fully understand that running at whatever max speed the controller i able to do, the battery voltage will determine the top speed. But with the speed limiter ON, why does i still loose speed. I can push the high speed button at low battery and it will still go faster, so it is has the ability to do so.. Anyone with experience using different controllers this way?
Also, what controllers are good choices these days. It seems that brand names come and go relatively fast and some are next to impossible to actually by. And I am not planning on digging up $250 for a controller, that's just half the price of my entire ride. And I care nothing about silent butter-smooth running, so a good square wave controller is perfectly acceptable. I kind of like the clicky sound they make and people can hear 'something' coming