spinningmagnets said:
Suppose I was willing to go down as low as 12S, 10S, 8S, or even 6S, but very high amps (when the trend has been to go up to 20S?). Would I buy an 18-FET controller without FETs, buy them myself, then solder them in? What new FETs are the cutting edge for lower volts and higher amps? If not a common and avaiialble 18-FET, something from Kelly? I am inexperienced with higher-amp controllers.
Infinion optimos5 has some impressive offerings.
Also, I'm not saying 20s isn't the ultimate for a high performance application due to the MOSFET power density per package unit being better in the 100V fets than 150v or 75v range at this time.
I just personally have come to appreciate fewer series cell count strings and embracing current. I find copper/aluminum bus cross section to be more reliable, because every added bms wire and connection and components is added points of failure, and making power bus terminations to handle just a few hundred amps and last forever is cake, and publically available to order MOSFETs have been released that can do compact 6 fet designs for 6s pack voltages and handle a few kW easily.
http://www.infineon.com/dgdl/Infineon-IRL40SC228-DS-v01_00-EN.pdf?fileId=5546d462566bd0c701567ece08d03664
If you are chasing the pinnacle of power density, by all means go with 20s.
If you just want a couple kW for a bicycle it seems like a bit of unneeded complexity from my own perspective, but I understand the concerns of folks who have a lot of experience working in say 5Amp to 50Amp systems and seeing first hand what hundreds of amps of current do to cabling and interconnections designed for 5-50Amps. If cabled and terminated correctly it gets no warmer and wastes no more power and the lower system voltage makes no impact on batter/controller/motor system efficiency if using the right parts and designed around embracing current rather than always trying to avoid it.
If there's one common trend I've seen in all my EV builds, it's that current is the friend of EV performance, not the enemy. Properly sized wires and busing and interconnect terminations are not things prone to malfunction.
imidacloprid said:
Wouldn't the Inductance from a 1T hub motor kill any controller?
Never have seen someone sell a 1T hub motor.
It's been the same difficulty it was a decade ago, but today we have MOSFETS capable of higher switching speeds with lower losses and affordable high current measurement abilities have increased at least 100x in performance and motor-controller brain chips have 10-100x faster processors to control the parts.
I bet it's cheaper today to make a motor controller that does ~200A phase current and capable of say 7-8s battery voltage and capable of controlling current in a 1T winding than it cost 10 years ago to build one that did say ~40-50A and could only control current in high inductance motors.