Blownfuse said:
Thank you everyone for your help.
Are there certain electronic components that are better than others?
Genuinely too big and wide of a discussion question to respond to- I find that as a rule, I would
think automotive OEM stuff would be a step above ATV things, outside of companies like Polaris who have 3-wheeled cars on the road. If you keep it 48v you'll have a wide access to cheap DC-DC converters from eBikes making the modification of automotive electronics easy. Also good to note, that hybrid cars in the junkyards can easily net you some SERIOUSLY high-quality wiring on the cheap; I have a set of 440v HV battery cables from a 2016 Ford Fusion I got for $15 total that are so well-made they could be used for welding cable, and it also included the 2, 2-4 gauge wires for the trunk-mounted lead acid. I think it's easily over $100 in wiring now! Thanks to Ebikes tho, you don't have to do any DC-DC stuff for lots of accessories; 48v native is VERY common for lights and accessories now. Obviously, any Alibaba / Amazon parts you find will have any quality level imaginable and I don't trust much of it.
If I can "impose" any ideas into you, I wouldn't yeet the current parts just yet. If I had the time and your ATV, I'd:
- Mark all wire connections with masking tape and different colored markers.
- Have your grandson take TONS of pictures of the vehicle. Your goal is so there's no question where anything goes and you have it as a resource.
- Find a big empty space on the floor, where the ATV can stay for a bit.
- Take the whole thing apart, and lay wiring and connections out where they were, approximately. Goal is to skeletonize.
- Power wash the ATV chassis and dry it completely. Look for cracks in the frame, janky welds, drilled holes in odd places... anything that says someone modified it. If you find some, be serious if you wanna bother with the project. Check for straightness.
- Watch youtube videos on classic/vintage computer restoring on how to clean the wires and connectors. I know you'll need steel wool, some brass brushes, nylon brushes (like carb cleaner ones) and CRC electronics cleaner. Go ham! Clean every connection.
- Finally, after all that, try testing it. Does the motor spin true? Controller turn on?
While Lead-acid batteries are on their way out for a DAMN good reason, fact is they're still stupid cheap and can be ROMPED on, provided you charge them within 2 hours of being drained to 50% or less. You still actually have one of the most expensive parts of a build- the charger- and if it works, doing much else to this vehicle will be an added cost that may detract from your enjoyment- and may also be too complex and out of your comfort zone.
I'd suggest- assuming everything can still be salvaged and can work- to keep it stock. Brushed DC controllers are CHEAP and so is that motor- I've gotten forklift motors for pennies before!- so I see no need to throw good money after bad, when you don't even know what it's like to mess around with. Besides, from these images it looks heavily modified so it's probably best to get a REAL good look and plan before spending dosh.