dnmun
1 PW
14S of lipo is not too much for a 36V controller. but 60V lifepo4 is too much for a 36V controller. that is 72V DC full charge.
docw009 said:Installed speedometer. The controller is capped at 20 mph, which seems fast enough on my beater bike, but I will experiment with the wire marked "speed limit" to see if that does anything.
docw009 said:Good! Nice looking bike. I don't notice any grinding from the 36 volt motor, well maybe I do. Slight growl when I run it with the 6 Kph button held down, That's really slow.
The gearing on my bike is typical mountain bike. I can barely pedal much faster than 21 mph. I'm happy with a sedate 13 mph in PAS mode. Rode 22 miles today at that speed and battery power level still at 4 LED's. I expect 40+ miles at those speeds,
Wrt your LED console, I bet that the console, throttle and pedal sensors all run at low voltage, probably 5 volts, The controller uses a DC-DC converter to power the logic, so it doesn't matter whether it's 24 or 36 volts. What will matter is that the controller will still have its low voltage shutoff set for the smaller battery, so that will ruin a 36 volt battery if it does not have its own cutoff circuit.
I have a 48 volt battery that fits my kit build, but I'm not interested in testing the above bet.![]()
jose said:Here, hear on the less is more w/ eBikes...I added the torque arm only because my wife will be using it alot while RVing. Have lotsa slime in front tire, co2 inflator onboard and fingers crossed.
Only added the BMS cuz I couldn't spend $120 on the iCharger 1010b. I created a thread asking if possible to balance my 10S "piecewise" w/ a 6 or 8S balancer...apparently NO; and some folks recmnd the BMS alternative.
Assume w/ ur RC background, ur building LiPo batteries...that keeps the budget under control.