marty said:
Lets try removing things one thing at a time to see if the problem goes away. Unplug the motor power cord.
If I unplug ANY thing at any time, then the circuit is incomplete, so it would be impossible to test if the problem was there or not. Its literally just "A goes into B, B goes into C" its so simply its just plain not possible that there is any problem with the connections. The way its set up its physically impossible to plug something into the wrong thing, because the plug would FIT. The plug from the controller to the throttle is a different size/shape than the plug from the controller to the e-brakes, which is different than the plug from the controller to the motor itself, etc. The plugs are all designed in such a way that the ONLY thing they fit into is their correct match. I couldnt possibly plug, say female plug A into male plug F, because they wouldnt fit together. Female plug A ONLY fits with male plug A, female B only fits with male B, etc.
Let me be absolutely clear about this, to everyone:
THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NO POSSIBILITY WHATSOEVER THAT ANY WIRE, CABLE, OR CONNECTION IS HOOKED UP WRONG I have
checked and double checked EVERYTHING a dozen times over. Every single wire is where it should be.
parabellum said:
You repeat and repeat battery to "motor power cord"? Should it mean to controller power cord? In past I have connected 98v battery to 60A and more capable controllers with 4A fuse for motor wire combination search and have not blown them. You definitively have "A SHORT" wherever you are sticking your battery in! You are performing dangerous tasks with no sufficient knowledge, (understanding from your words) questionable skills, using relatively dangerous battery chemistry and apparently ignoring or overseeing every wise advice. You should stop sticking those "self made" batteries to any plug before you burn your and/or others home down.
Yes, my bad. Its the cord from the battery to the controller, which then leads into the motor. (semantics)
I am not ignoring any advice, I am simply already aware that the advice is incorrect. No matter how many times people say I have a short, it doesnt make it suddenly become true. I know for a fact that I do not have a short. period. The end. Ive checked. I know. There is. no. short. Ok? its not ignoring the advice, its simply telling people that that particular piece of advice is incorrect in this situation.
Punx0r said:
Right, so the battery is connected to the controller, switch is powered on, and everything is fine?
Then you connect the motor to the controller and the use immediately blows?
If so, two thoughts:
1) It's unconventional and unusually to power up a controller first and then connect the motor. Unless this worked before I would try it the other way around and see if it makes any different.
2) The controller may have a fault, such that the output is shorting through the motor. However, if this were the case you'd expect a spark at the connector as you plugged it in.
BTW, you can use a bulb in place of the fuse for testing purposes. Bulb lights up = significant power being drawn. Saves on fuses.
No, that is incorrect.
The battery is connected to the cord to the controller (all cords are connected properly) and I the switch is turned on, and the fuse blows.
Everything is connected, the entire thing is ready and set up properly, but the switch is not in the "on" position. I flip the switch into "on" position, and the fuse blows.
The controller is not at fault, as it still functions properly with my old battery pack, which is the same as this one, but 15Ah instead of 60Ah.
I will try the bulb idea when I get home tonight. (I just hope the bulb doesnt explode on me.)
dnmun said:
or he could be connecting the battery directly to two of the phase wires and skipping the controller altogether since he is already sure he knows there is nothing wrong with the controller.
there are a lotta people who test using the spark test to see if things work right. i remember the guy who used the spark test on his throttle.
No, the battery gets connected to the cord coming from the controller, which in turn in already connected to the motor, throttle, etc. The switch is off and everything is connected, and at that point, all is fine. Then, i turn on the switch, and the fuse blows immediately.
I will post a video when I get home tonight, showing exactly how everything is hooked up, and what happens when I flip the switch.