Burgerman wrote:They have 30% extra torque, at the times where the 90A units get stuck. For curb climbing, wheelies, driving up steep stuff. Basically digging yourself out of a hole. Do they allow more average amps over time? Dunno. Probably as they wll be using lower resistance mosfets.
Sorry, I meant the PM80 - the same case shape as the PM120, though I thought there was a 90A version of that as well? As to the firmware - there are ways & means, but I don't have the bandwidth to look at that right now.Burgerman wrote:Isnt the main board in the PM90 different to all the rest though? Since it has all the seating actuator stuff built onto the board at one end?
Even if you are correct. How would we get hold of the firmware that allows a PM90 be as capable as the 120?
Burgerman wrote:This is 70 for a few secs, and 90 is boost. So compared to your 120 amp one its lacking 1/3rd torque.
They usuall fit these on chairs with just tilt or recline or something. And 2 pole motors. It has its own SM module if you want it. Not ISM, that wont work with it.
On the other hand it may not exist. I have a bladder infection and things are a bit weird, hot/cold, teeth chattering, and I hear sounds and see stuff that doesent make sense!
Burgerman wrote:The single channel one is much dfferent to all the dual channel wheelchair units. And its driving one motor. It may be that it doesent do 120A. Because that would be each motor. And it may not allow 240A (2x 120A channels combined) as you would expect. So may be limited to less. Or it may be set lower because the motor or wiring cant take that many Amps without some kind of damage to it. For e.g demagnatize its magnets. Or heat damage. Or brushes burning. Or gearbox/rubber cush drive strength.
Its a bit of a one off. They dont work like a normal wheelchair controller. Its been factory modified as a scooter controller, with seperate actuator controlled steering like a car or scooter. Normal drive or steering logic and normal wheelchair style control doesent apply. What you have there is a fork lift truck layout, that uses a stability module to make it go straight as rear steer isnt stable. Its settings will be nothing like a powerchair.
Burgerman wrote:https://www.cw-industrialgroup.com/Products/Mobility-Vehicle-Solutions/R-net/EL-Power-Module
This is the PM90 or EL 90A unit fitted to lots of cheap 2 pole power chairs. Its a 70A with 90 boost for a couple of secs, includes actuator output. So cheapest way to do a basic chair. Missing 30A of the 120A version.
Yours is a custom build 120 - made into a single channel unit by modification. Not on the website that I can see. Custom build for meyra or other manufacturers that want to steer a scooter/car/buggy with a joystick. I saw one, so know they exist, cant find anyreference to it.
Burgerman wrote:Why you need the 120 module!
This is my salsa. rear drive. 185kg rehab style chair. Fat user (me).
NOTE the current required on each motor. If the power module couldnt supply that the it MAY or may not start to turn. But it wont be responsive. The chair wont follow the joystick properly. I hate that... See current M1 and M2 (Motor 1 and 2). This is not doing anything special. Just a zero speed turn in place in my hallway. If I do this on the lawn when its soft, its pinned at 120A on each motor. And wont turn reliably.
If this was an 8mph version, with taller gearing it would need 160A instead to get the same torque level. Theres no 160A power modules though... So for my purposes, 8mph motors are a step too far for decent control. It wouldnt (doesent!) turn reliably on a heavy carpet for e.g. Tested a few different 8mph motors.
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