Burgerman wrote:Wouldnt that depend on why?
I wouldnt run 10 cells you will cook the electrolytic capacitors.
And depending on which control system, it might not allow it to go faster anyway.
And you prsumable charge at 3.6V per cell too right?
Burgerman wrote:Magic or sunrise dont make controllers. They are made by companies like curtis wright, curtiss instuments, penny and giles. And are sold ar things like rhino, or R-net or rebranded for various companies like prides QLOGIC stuff.
PG stuff 35V peak before error cuts power.
Dynamic 32V
ETC.
But they are intended and desighned for lead, to run at a nominal 23 to 25V in use. Plus or minus a little noise and regen voltages etc.
I know but its firmware allows higher voltage parameter. Others just reset if you go too high.
If you have spare controllers etc and breaking them doesent worry you then great. Why not.
Well thats a good possibility. But as long as you tell them that and allow the option... Or just remove 2 cells.
emilevirus wrote:Also, do you know what happens on high voltage error? It'll set the electromagnetic brakes yes but does it cut the circuit? Like is it smart enough to see that the motor is generating too much current and cut the circuit.
I suppose it could happen with lead right? Say you fully charge then go down a steep hill for like a km. Will the voltage shoot up?
Motors generate voltage spikes, EMI, and radio frequency interference (RFI) which can damage or disrupt circuits nearby. Arcing initially occurs once the motor rotates at the brushes, then the generated EMI from the commutator flows back towards the power supply, RFI goes into the air, and finally as the electromagnetic field from the inductor collapses, a huge voltage spike occurs. The EMI may cease a circuit from functioning or degrade the performance dramatically while the RFI would disrupt any equipment relying on RF. Luckily, there are methods to suppress or at least lower the intensity of the disruptions.
Got a modified Magic Extreme X8. Now would like to sell it. Do I leave it as is? Do I put back lead acid bricks?
Burgerman wrote:Theres a newer version of that thing, that doesent have the flip flop steering I seem to remember reading somewhere. Would that be better?
emilevirus wrote:But when I turn my joystick on, it gets harder to push means it's now in "generator" mode. When it's off and I push, is it still sending current to the battery. Why is it easier to push then?
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