dogman said:
One of the fusin motors i tested had regen enabled, by having a clutch permanently locked somehow. Since it was a very small motor, I found the regen braking effect to be quite underwhelming.
I have no idea if it was really just the small motor, or if the controller limited it. 5 amps regen was the max. You could barely tell it was working.
AFAICT without yet having tried that same motor on a different controller, it is the controller itself that limits it (as it was only a 6FET and designed to be pretty strict about it's limiting for motor or braking use).
FWIW the way it is made is that it has no clutch at all, just a 3-fingered "Y" mount for the planet gears, fixed to the axle so that it can never freewheel, essentially making it a geared-down direct-drive (if that makes sense).
Theoretically a geared hub should do *better* regen braking than a true DD hub, as the gears help increase the motor speed...but the heat generated during braking has nowhere to go quickly so it will help heat the hub up internally faster than if it were not being used to brake. If it's already being used heavily as a motor, it may overheat it. This is one of the several tests I need to do with the Fusin above, if I ever get the time.
One thing you must seriously consider, though, is that the torque of a geared hub is much higher than that of an equivalent-power DD hub, and so the regen at similar currents will also be higher torque, requiring stronger dropouts and a tight (perfect) fit in them and/or the torque arms/plates, or you will end up spinning it's axle in the dropouts. I promise you won't like it.
Also consider that as others pointed out, there will be (a lot!) more drag on the wheel when not applying power, trying to just coast (or pedal!).
What would be ideal is to build or modify a geared hub motor so that it uses a clutch you can engage or disengage yourself, from outside the motor. Like an electric clutch on a car's A/C compressor, for instance. If you did that, you could coast when you wanted to, and regen when you brake. Of course, you can do this with a mid-drive easily, by having no freewheel in the chain or belt to the wheel, just a clutch.