torqueboards said:
sleziak said:
Keep in mind that most of you use a 50xx <1600 watt version, the motor I'm using is capable of outputting 2000+ watts, it's the longest and torquiest of the 50xx series. It's too long to fit two of them on one truck
I think most of us use 2200watts and 2400watts.
I see, I might be wrong then
I have another exciting story to tell; The ESC has shown it's magic smoke an hour ago...
While I was testing the brakes at 4A current limited supply, the speedcontroller suddenly went *poof*. My desk filled with smoke and a quite familiar smell: Burnt ICs. There was even a flame for a brief second.
At that moment I thought *oh no* and started inspecting the damage, the weird thing was that the Mosfets all seemed to be fine. I then proceeded to disassemble the two layer ESC stumbling upon a burned linear regulator IC.
After a quick search on google I unfortunately was not able to find a replacement for that particular IC or anything compatible with it. After a quick thought, I started wondering what this 6v regulator has to do with the rest of the circuitry, it's job should only be to power the receiver through the 3 pin cable, there is a dedicated 5V linear regulator that powers the electronics on the board.
After unsoldering that particular chip, having high hopes I turned on the ESC: *Beep Beep*, it works! But not for too long ..
I looked over at my power supply, the ESC was pulling 4A (The limit) without doing anything. After quickly disconnecting everything I went on and checked every single Mosfet, they all appeared to be fine and in-spec. I checked nearly every larger component on the PCB and could not find any issues what-so-ever, there clearly was high resistance on the battery input line but I didn't know where it came from.
Being out of ideas I've noticed that there is a marked "middle line" between the BEC and the rest of the PCB. As a last resort I've cut the entire BEC section off, powered the ESC and started laughing; It's fine now
After connecting my receiver, mapping a damaged output pin to another pin it all ran perfectly once again. I am not powering the receiver from the built in 5V linear regulator.
I wonder what happened and why the BEC that wasn't used burned when I applied brakes. The positive and negative wire were far away from each other so a short was out of question. My theory is is that the braking motor generated too much voltage for the BEC to handle, resulting in the light show
I'm going to replace the default caps to higher capacity ones, just in case.
Morale of this story: Uhm.... How to shed weight and save space 101
