llile
1 kW
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2010
- Messages
- 457
JohnRobHolmes can tell you I was stumped yesterday, but diligent troubleshooting has revealed the problem: Stupidity. In fact, that should be the first thing to check for. Look in the mirror - does the reflection resemble Homer Simpson? Then there is your problem.
Have a setup with two motors, two controllers, one throttle, one battery. Battery is two 36V PINGs in series for 72V. Wired it all up, hopped on, and took off. It went about 25 feet and stopped. Checked for blown fuses, dead batteries, everything seems to be fine. Plugged it all in, hopped on, went about 25 Feet and stopped - no power when I twist the throttle. Power returned when I unplugged all the batteries and plugged them back in. Same thing happened again.
JohnRob's first theory was a bad throttle. Not a bad theory, since throttle failures are common.
But here is a simple troubleshooting sequence that tells the tale:
Disconnect e-brake override plug, in case that is the problem. Didn't make any difference. Keep it simple.
Leave CA plugged in to two controllers. CA chows 79V on the batteries. Bike up on a stand, so motors spin free. Ease on the throttle slowly, motors work fine for some time. No problems.
Then goose throttle hard to WOT. Everything stops. A glance at the CA shows 38V on the batteries! Where did my 79V go?
Unplug all batteries and check terminal voltages. one is 39V, one is 38 V. Fuses all OK. Everything seems fine. Plug them back in, CA shows 79V again.
Now plug in just the throttle, to both controllers. Unplug the CA. Rev it up, both motors spin fine. Goose it to WOT, everything works fine. Check battery voltage. It is 38V again! But it worked.
Unplug all batteries, check voltages and fuses, plug them back in. Batteries seem happy. Now CA measures 79V on the batteries.
It looks to me like one of the batteries' BMS is cutting it off. Likely there is one charged battery and one discharged. BMS cuts out on low voltage, disabling the battery. When battery voltage drops below 61V, where CA is set, then CA inhibits throttle via throttle override to the controller. If the CA isn't connected, then controllers just see the throttle signal, without interference from the CA throttle override. The motors will still run on a stand at 38V or 79V, they don't care. They have no load, except bearing friction, so they spin fine on half voltage.
Sure enough, I put both batteries on chargers, and one of them lights up like a christmas tree right away, while the other one sucks up juice like a drunk on New Year's Eve. I have a rule - always charge batteries after every ride, so I always assume my battery is charged when I hook it onto the bike. But this time, I musta fergot to charge. In a two-battery system, with antiparallel diodes, even if one battery is disconnected, current still flows (this may be hard to understand but trust me on it) albeit at half voltage.
So this leads to a question: How exactly does a PING BMS behave under these conditions: Excessive current, and low battery voltage? Ping's documentation is characteristically brief on this point, mentioning a "high current override 40A" but not explaining exactly the sequence of operation. Once the BMS cuts out, when does it decide to cut back in - when ALL loads are disconnected? Seems like that must be the case. Who knows the sequence of operation for sure?

Have a setup with two motors, two controllers, one throttle, one battery. Battery is two 36V PINGs in series for 72V. Wired it all up, hopped on, and took off. It went about 25 feet and stopped. Checked for blown fuses, dead batteries, everything seems to be fine. Plugged it all in, hopped on, went about 25 Feet and stopped - no power when I twist the throttle. Power returned when I unplugged all the batteries and plugged them back in. Same thing happened again.
JohnRob's first theory was a bad throttle. Not a bad theory, since throttle failures are common.
But here is a simple troubleshooting sequence that tells the tale:
Disconnect e-brake override plug, in case that is the problem. Didn't make any difference. Keep it simple.
Leave CA plugged in to two controllers. CA chows 79V on the batteries. Bike up on a stand, so motors spin free. Ease on the throttle slowly, motors work fine for some time. No problems.
Then goose throttle hard to WOT. Everything stops. A glance at the CA shows 38V on the batteries! Where did my 79V go?
Unplug all batteries and check terminal voltages. one is 39V, one is 38 V. Fuses all OK. Everything seems fine. Plug them back in, CA shows 79V again.
Now plug in just the throttle, to both controllers. Unplug the CA. Rev it up, both motors spin fine. Goose it to WOT, everything works fine. Check battery voltage. It is 38V again! But it worked.
Unplug all batteries, check voltages and fuses, plug them back in. Batteries seem happy. Now CA measures 79V on the batteries.
It looks to me like one of the batteries' BMS is cutting it off. Likely there is one charged battery and one discharged. BMS cuts out on low voltage, disabling the battery. When battery voltage drops below 61V, where CA is set, then CA inhibits throttle via throttle override to the controller. If the CA isn't connected, then controllers just see the throttle signal, without interference from the CA throttle override. The motors will still run on a stand at 38V or 79V, they don't care. They have no load, except bearing friction, so they spin fine on half voltage.
Sure enough, I put both batteries on chargers, and one of them lights up like a christmas tree right away, while the other one sucks up juice like a drunk on New Year's Eve. I have a rule - always charge batteries after every ride, so I always assume my battery is charged when I hook it onto the bike. But this time, I musta fergot to charge. In a two-battery system, with antiparallel diodes, even if one battery is disconnected, current still flows (this may be hard to understand but trust me on it) albeit at half voltage.
So this leads to a question: How exactly does a PING BMS behave under these conditions: Excessive current, and low battery voltage? Ping's documentation is characteristically brief on this point, mentioning a "high current override 40A" but not explaining exactly the sequence of operation. Once the BMS cuts out, when does it decide to cut back in - when ALL loads are disconnected? Seems like that must be the case. Who knows the sequence of operation for sure?