Jabotical
100 W
[**EDIT** Turned out what I thought was motor/controller heat-related was instead my CA limiting output due to an aggressive CA low voltage cutoff combined with voltage sag in my underspec'd NCRb battery. Savvy and generous responders did provide some excellent insights and info about both motor heat and battery spec'ing]
I converted a Trek 820 a few days ago with a 1500w leafbikes motor, a C3635-NC Grinfineon controller (35A, 48v max), and a 52v 13.5ah battery.
This was my introduction to ebikes, and a joy to ride at first. On the first longish ride (a dozen miles) I noticed (and confirmed via Cycle Analyst) the power dropping increasingly low even at full throttle, as I went along.
I belatedly realized my battery pack was only equipped to source ~20A (4p NCRb cells), so the next day I reduced the current limit to that and went on another longish ride on a full charge (eleven miles in the morning and then eleven back in the evening). It did involve some (fairly minor) inclines, but as I went along the second stretch the performance got worse and worse, until the CA said I was only pushing ~5A / a few hundred watts (and it felt like it!).
In the first instance my battery got pretty hot, and I assumed that overtaxing it was the only issue. But this second time (running with a 20A limit, mind you), towards the end I felt the motor, and it was so hot it was painful to keep my fingers on it. The controller was also nearly that hot. What gives?? That motor is nominally rated at 1500w, and people here report running it continuously at much more than that. The phase wires and battery connector were cool to the touch, and the battery case wasn't very hot.
On the Cycle Analyst diagnostic screen it would show a capital V when I engaged the throttle, which I believe means the voltage was being limited? The throttle mode was set to amperage. I'd only used around 8 or 9 ah of my 13.5 by the time I limped home all asweat from having to peddle so much in the heat.
Any ideas what could be going on? It's really hot here in Phoenix, was probably around 110 F on the way home when it failed/heated so dramatically. But surely that shouldn't cause a big beefy motor to overheat like that.
If I lift the back wheel and give it a moderately good spin with my hand, it goes for 4-5 seconds before dragging to a stop. I assume that's reasonable for a big DD motor, even a reportedly well-designed one like this? I can peddle along pretty well even without power (though there's naturally some drag compared to pre-conversion -- some of which might be the added weight). The regenerative braking continued to slow it down pretty well when I engaged it.
It's very disheartening, but I'm keen to do what I need to to get it functioning properly. Any advice from all you savvy types on how to analyze the issue is deeply appreciated!
I converted a Trek 820 a few days ago with a 1500w leafbikes motor, a C3635-NC Grinfineon controller (35A, 48v max), and a 52v 13.5ah battery.
This was my introduction to ebikes, and a joy to ride at first. On the first longish ride (a dozen miles) I noticed (and confirmed via Cycle Analyst) the power dropping increasingly low even at full throttle, as I went along.
I belatedly realized my battery pack was only equipped to source ~20A (4p NCRb cells), so the next day I reduced the current limit to that and went on another longish ride on a full charge (eleven miles in the morning and then eleven back in the evening). It did involve some (fairly minor) inclines, but as I went along the second stretch the performance got worse and worse, until the CA said I was only pushing ~5A / a few hundred watts (and it felt like it!).
In the first instance my battery got pretty hot, and I assumed that overtaxing it was the only issue. But this second time (running with a 20A limit, mind you), towards the end I felt the motor, and it was so hot it was painful to keep my fingers on it. The controller was also nearly that hot. What gives?? That motor is nominally rated at 1500w, and people here report running it continuously at much more than that. The phase wires and battery connector were cool to the touch, and the battery case wasn't very hot.
On the Cycle Analyst diagnostic screen it would show a capital V when I engaged the throttle, which I believe means the voltage was being limited? The throttle mode was set to amperage. I'd only used around 8 or 9 ah of my 13.5 by the time I limped home all asweat from having to peddle so much in the heat.
Any ideas what could be going on? It's really hot here in Phoenix, was probably around 110 F on the way home when it failed/heated so dramatically. But surely that shouldn't cause a big beefy motor to overheat like that.
If I lift the back wheel and give it a moderately good spin with my hand, it goes for 4-5 seconds before dragging to a stop. I assume that's reasonable for a big DD motor, even a reportedly well-designed one like this? I can peddle along pretty well even without power (though there's naturally some drag compared to pre-conversion -- some of which might be the added weight). The regenerative braking continued to slow it down pretty well when I engaged it.
It's very disheartening, but I'm keen to do what I need to to get it functioning properly. Any advice from all you savvy types on how to analyze the issue is deeply appreciated!