Braddudya said:
E-HP said:
If you get it running smoothly in reverse, what happens is you keep the wiring the same and set the controller's reverse jumper?
It goes in reverse but it is not full power. It would be interesting to see if it stops stuttering but I didn't test that. I just saw that when I jumped the reverse wires it would spin in the right direction but with very little power.
Some controllers have what is sometimes called a "trike mode" reverse, where they limiit power or speed to ensure it remains handleable by the rider.
Others literally just reverse direction.
With a motor that has advanced or retarded hall timing/placement, either one will not run as smoothly as forward, unless the controller knows what this timing difference is (from neutral) and knows how to compensate for it.
I am debating trying a new controller. Possibly something like a sabvoton which has smooth power delivery. I love this whole project except for this one huge problem. I can't even let other people ride it because everyone just goes too heavy on the throttle right off the line and it sounds like it's smashing itself apart. It really takes the fun out of it to baby it off the line everytime.
I don't know if the sabvotons qualify, but an FOC controller with well-designed firmware can operate a motor very smoothly, once it is tuned to the motor--but you *have* to setup the controller for the specific motor parameters (hall timing, phase resistance, inductance, number of poles, kV, etc) for it to work correctly. Some controllers have a good autotune, but even with those you sometimes have to tweak things for best operation.
But...it might be your motor itself causing you grief rather than the controller, if it does have non-neutral hall timing, and that may cause the same problem with any other controller that expects neutral timing and doesn't have a way to compensate for it.
Anyway, it hasn't been established yet if the motor does have neutral timing or not...or if it is some other problem with the controller or even just sensor signals. I've been trying to think of a way you could easily test the timing without an oscilloscope or building a test rig....