Hey there folks, long time no post, I hope you're all doing well.
My current work situation requires that I drive a very long commute (about 4 hours one way) into a major city, where I stay for about two weeks out of the month with a friend, essentially couch surfing while I work, then I drive back home. In this major city, I must street park my car, a very small 2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV hatchback, also known as an Opel Ampera E to some international members.
To enable this, I can't bring my 400 pound/180kg Amy Systems Alltrack R3 easily, so I bought the lightest folding power wheelchair I could find on Amazon, 33 pounds/15kg with the 3 pound/1.36kg battery removed. It folds "forward" after undoing one latch, sort of onto itself in a more or less square shape, but fairly thick. An able-bodied person could pull it behind themselves like rolling luggage if needed, to give you an idea.
The Amazon listing was removed (for some unknown reason) when I went back to the site to get some details of it, but it has a 220 pound/100kg weight limit, 360 watt (I'm guessing 2x 180 watt) motors, and has a listed top speed of about 3.73 MPH/6 KPH. Yes, these specifications are pathetic, but it needed to be small and light enough for me to load and unload from the car by myself, and get me around the city to my job sites, which vary. Interestingly, when I unpacked it, I noted that it had no neutral levers on the motors, and driving it confirmed that it was not equipped with electromagnetic brakes. It's nice not to hear a constant loud clacking sound when I stop, but that does require me to be more diligent of course. It has a manual brake lever near each wheel that I can easily reach if needed.
Like most power wheelchairs, I find the default programming to be terrible. When I'm moving forward slowly, it stop and starts, very jerky, it takes seemingly forever to get moving to its maximum forward speed, and small curb ramps in the city, where I have to drive at an angle rather than directly forward slow the chair down a lot. I'd also like to deactivate the reverse beep.
But since this is the very definition of a cheap Chinese thing, it has no real brand name anywhere on it. The controller/brain appears to be fully integrated into the joystick, as under the chair there is only a small removable battery with two leads going to the motors, and no electronics box there, while the joystick is a bit bulbous and oversized, with a thick lead coming off of it. There is no visible programming connector, there is only two XLR connectors, one on the joystick, and one on the battery.
How do I determine what the controller is, so that I can program it to perform more tolerably?
Since my photos of it are too large to upload here directly, I've put them in an album on Google Photos.
Here is a link to the photos I took of it.As a related question, the motors seem to be quite noisy when driving forward, but I have only put less than 100 feet of mileage on it so far. How do I get them to quiet down?