Could you wire a 0-5k pot on the throttle signal wire and set it to limit the throttle? I would like to some how be able to turn the throttle to full but limit the top speed of the bike on occasions. I figured this would be away one way to do this.
deardancer3 said:Here are some ideas:
If you have a straight resistive throttle, then putting a variable pot in line with the +V supply will do the trick.
or hook the new pot wiper to controller 'throtle input', one end of pot to grnd, the other end of pot to output of throttle.
tweak new pot for affect on the bike stand.
d
nogas4me said:deardancer3 said:Here are some ideas:
If you have a straight resistive throttle, then putting a variable pot in line with the +V supply will do the trick.
or hook the new pot wiper to controller 'throtle input', one end of pot to grnd, the other end of pot to output of throttle.
tweak new pot for affect on the bike stand.
d
I have a hall effect throttle on the bike. It has three wires red,black and green. I assume the green wire is the throttle input to controller. Thee black wire is the ground wire. The red wire I believe is a 5v supply wire to the throttle. If this is correct then I would cut the green wire and wire one end of the green wire to the pot, The other terminal on the pot to would be wired to ground and the wiper terminal of the pot would be wired with the other end of the green wire. Does that sound right?
Also, What is a straight resistive throttle mean? If I had one I could just wire this the same way but use the red supply wire going to the throttle?
fechter said:You can add a resistor in series with the throttle line to limit it. The value of the resistance will depend on the controller. I'd guess around 50k for wiring it in series. When the resistor is all the way up, the resistance is essentially zero, so you will get full throttle. You could put a switch across the resistor to bypass it.
The other way is to add a divider to the output. This makes it pretty independent of the controller type.
Here's a diagram:
nogas4me said:ok I think I wrote that last post wrong. Please let me know if this sounds correct. Wire the top of the pot to the signal wire from throttle and the bottom to ground. The wiper is wired to one of the poles on my spdt switch. I then wire the com of the spdt switch to the green signal wire from the controller. On the last pole of the spdt switch I wire a lead back to the green throttle wire. If this makes sense I can switch the pot completely on to adjust speed or flip the switch and turn the pot completely off and have a direct connection from throttle to the controller.