Mr. Electric used one of the TNC controllers up to 60v, but that model lacked a current limiter and he had to add one. Often times the only difference in the circuit between various voltage controllers is where the low battery cutout is set.
I have partial schematics of several brushed controllers. The basic layout is the same on most of them.
I'm sure if you got just about any of them, they could be modified. It would be best if it had a current limit in the ballpark of what your motors will handle. You also would need to be sure it wasn't one that is potted with epoxy.
Whatever you get, you just take it apart an read the numbers off the FETs and diodes to determine their ratings. The main capacitor(s) will be marked with a voltage rating too. The low voltage regulator may be a bit trickier, but there are several ways around that. Either a pre-regulator or run the regulator input off a tap on the batteries.
I have partial schematics of several brushed controllers. The basic layout is the same on most of them.
I'm sure if you got just about any of them, they could be modified. It would be best if it had a current limit in the ballpark of what your motors will handle. You also would need to be sure it wasn't one that is potted with epoxy.
Whatever you get, you just take it apart an read the numbers off the FETs and diodes to determine their ratings. The main capacitor(s) will be marked with a voltage rating too. The low voltage regulator may be a bit trickier, but there are several ways around that. Either a pre-regulator or run the regulator input off a tap on the batteries.