karma said:and the setup from controller to motor. not the sam controller or hubmotor hopfully you can make sence of it.
fechter said:If you're getting resistance in delta, then it means that one of the windings is reversed.
Each winding (yellow, blue, green) has two wires. Each phase pair has a polarity that must be observed. You could try reversing one pair at a time to see if you can find which one is reversed.
During switching, if the motor phase wires momentarily short (milliseconds), it should not damage anything other than possibly the relay contacts. If the controller wires momentarily short and the controller is giving output, it will most likely blow the controller.
What may really be needed is a sequencer that kills the throttle, opens all the contacts, closes the contacts in the new configuration, then restores the throttle. If you are using double throw relays, then the contacts will automatically open before closing. I think using multiple DT relays with the coils connected should work fine as far as timing goes.
TylerDurden said:Doc's schematic shows the paired leads on the N/O terminals, the pix appear like the paired leads are on the COM terminals.
steveo said:Comon peps lets stay on track lol .. x5 star delta!!! not working for mehelp!
Are the windings in the x5 different from a 9 continent motor? is this why it doesn't work?
-steveo
caleb7777 said:Back a few pages I posted a link.
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=9215&start=195#p154427
This will work for most people well. But if you are running 72v and have a lot of current you could do one per phase with terminals on each connected so that all contacts attached in parallel giving much more than 40 amps. But try one alone first.
karma said:no it should work, there somthing a miss. i have three different typs of motors all work in delta. no problem.
have you tested a different controller?
ran the relays on there own power supply? the x5 will draw more amp in delta maybe the relays are switching on and off with the drop in amps. maybe 120v relays dont work with larger motors.
when you pulled the star apart to add axtra phase wires. could there be a strand of wire tide into anothere phase? possible.
lots to go over :wink:
fechter said:So you see what happens when one phase is reversed. It is a strong resistance. If the resistance is not strong, then you must have it phased properly. Do you feel resistance when turning the wheel by hand?
If you're only getting a higher than normal operating current, then that could mean the timing is off or the halls need to be reconfigured.
fechter said:When the wires are connected in delta, try breaking one of the 3 connection points and see if you notice a difference in the drag.