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With bolt-on connections like the Curtis has, never connect the pack up and *then* the controller, always connect all the stuff that's close together first, and then connect up the last point at whichever terminal is farthest from any other terminal that is in the power path. That's usually on the end battery of a pack.novembersierra28 said:I've crossed SLA cables before on the controller by accident... this could happen again as things are quite cramped on there.
The battery connections should be permanent, too, at the controller itself. And you should insulate them too, so that a piece of road debris (like a bolt fallen off of someone's car) can't be thrown up by the front tire and land on top of that controller, and toast your setup.novembersierra28 said:Bolt-on connections with the curtis are secure.
I keep the controller connected to the motor's + and - at all times, they're permanently sealed onto the controller.
Makes no difference what the controller is, since the short is not thru the controller, it's directly across the batteries, which is exactly what is happening to your pack, too, when you have any accidental short across the controller input connections as you described.plasmaboy's 'plasma' was terrifying...I could not believe what he had mentioned.... a 'ball of plasma' occurring, too bright to look into, hovering... jesus..... that's a lot of energy! 1000amps zilla controller right?
Miles said:What width bike chain?
http://www.connexchain.com/Bicycle-chains/BMX/1_342.html
liveforphysics said:Motocross chain is about 3x bigger than you need.
#219 is something light and compact that you will never break.
vanilla ice said:If you've got it setup as a single speed, that wide bmx chain will work on your narrow sprockets. I run bmx chain on multispeed sprockets without problems. Not sure if it will stand the torque.. you're asking a lot of bicycle chain.
vanilla ice said:If you've got it setup as a single speed, that wide bmx chain will work on your narrow sprockets. I run bmx chain on multispeed sprockets without problems. Not sure if it will stand the torque.. you're asking a lot of bicycle chain.
vanilla ice said:No. 219 will not work on your chainwheels. Nothing else except narrow multi-speed bicycle chain will work for your setup unless you change it up.
vanilla ice said:Got a link to pics? I'd like to see how you've got the bike setup.
vanilla ice said:Got a link to pics? I'd like to see how you've got the bike setup.
That kind of problem isn't from the amps (or else the insulation would have melted along the entire length of the wire) but rather from a high-resistance point.novembersierra28 said:the pic below demonstrates a curious incident ... I removed the insulation to find there was no copper there...it had been burnt up by the 200 odd amps
amberwolf said:That kind of problem isn't from the amps (or else the insulation would have melted along the entire length of the wire) but rather from a high-resistance point.novembersierra28 said:the pic below demonstrates a curious incident ... I removed the insulation to find there was no copper there...it had been burnt up by the 200 odd amps
Either a poor connection (if this was at the end of the wire), probably one that was arcing from the look of the burned copper on the exposed wire, or a broken conductor inside the insulation (if it was in the middle of the wire somewhere).