steves1977uk wrote:I'm using a 150 amp inline fuse the past 2 years on my lithium pack and never had it blow yet.
Steve
shirley_hkg wrote:You will never get it blown , if you use 1000 A , but lost protection .
Keep it small . If you are using 70A and never had any problem , no need to get one over 80A at all .![]()
steves1977uk wrote:I'm using a 150 amp inline fuse the past 2 years on my lithium pack and never had it blow yet.
Steve
steves1977uk wrote:Expresso, the R-Net PM is still 100A plus a 20A boost current. Even a 100A Pilot Plus can exceed 100A per motor as BM has shown in one of his videos. So a 150A fuse is really needed.
Steve
Burgerman wrote:Well I had a 100 fail. So fitted 150...
Burgerman wrote:As usual its not so simple. There is no correct fuse size. Its there to protect the battery cables, and nothing else really.
So as long as it goes before the cable insulation melts and starts a real short circuit with thousands of amps an a fire you should be safe. Lithium makes no difference. 150 is a little too large for stock powerchair cables. So I would likely use a 100. Or 125.
A slow blow, 100A fuse can take 200+ or many more Amps intermittently. And about 120A continuously, all day long.
Your powerchair MOTORS take more amps, than the battery cables usually need to carry. If you are trying to climb a curb at almost 0mph, the motors may take 100A each on a 100A controller. 200 total on the MOTOR cables. However because this is usually at the controllers current limit, and the motors themselves may be seeing only 12V to pull 100A, then the battery Amps will be halved, at 100A. (In other words, at stall, the sum of the motor Amps may be a lot less than the battery Amps.
As you then accelerate the motors at full power they will draw the same Amp limit, (100 each) but it takes more volts to do this. So now at one speed only, where the pulse-width is at 100 percent, and the motors are still pulling 100A each, the max power or watts is achieved. Typically around 2 to 3 mph under full torque on a steep ramp. This could make each motor take 100A at 24V. So now, just for an instant, at one speed only, the fuse will actually see 200A. Thats OK because a 100A fuse can take that.
Ok so now 150A is out - would 120A be fine - - https://smile.amazon.com/Blue-Sea-Syste ... l_huc_item
i was going to get this one - this is fast blow - do i need to look for slo blow models only ? 120A maybe ?
The reason mine popped was because my chair has its programming set to vicious. And its an old fuse. They do fatigue over time if you run them at the limit a lot... So body weight, programming, increased stall foldback time, increased temp foldback, 100% acceleration/turn acc etc, high motor compensation settings, etc, all stress the fuse at its highest limit more often. On its own not enough. Over time, pop!
expresso wrote:i think i am understanding a bit more now - the fuse has to not allow alot more current to pass on the battery wires - not more than the wire itself can handle - i see now why they use a 70A fuse on my battery cables - because they are 10AWG size -
if a fuse it too high - it would allow more than the wire can handle and then theres a problem - so at 70A - high enough for the wire size -
using 8 AWG - i need to raise that fuse size so it allows more to flow - but not more than the wire can safely handle - thats the idea ? but not low enough to starve it and it blows the fuse -
thinking it over on my Lead which i just checked - has two fuses - one for each battery - both are 70 A its heatshrinked very tight with braided sleeve - so i dont want to rip it open - i may need it later on
i though maybe i had to double that size because theres two there - but i realize thats not correct - 70A is 70A - if it goes too much over - it will pop one - and chair wont run anyway - even if one pops and other one dosnt
now i do go up hills alot now - and constant riding - is 100A still ok or 120A - if you think 150A is too much ?
Fast or slow burn model ?
not sure why a user said it can only handle 50A constant on the 100A version
Burgerman wrote:https://www.waytekwire.com/datasheet/48879a.pdf
Yes that will do it.
steves1977uk wrote:I have two of these... http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/151066747723? ... EBIDX%3AIT
Got the 135 amp and 150 amp ones. Didn't use them at the time since I couldn't find where they'd been put. If I ever get my lithium pack re-done, I might end up swapping out the fuse for the 135 amp circuit breaker.
Steve
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