Hi Ross,
Now I have to figure out a way to reverse the throttle voltage so the motor turns the opposite direction. I want to put two throttles side by side as you would see on a boat. The housings are designed to allow you to move the throttle handle to the opposite side. I’m sure swapping wires is easy enough. I’m just not familiar with hall sensors to do it.
If it was a potentiometer throttle, then you could simply reverse the Red and Black wires on the potentiometer terminals, but you
cannot reverse the voltage polarity on an electronic Hall Sensor.
Are you sure that moving the lever to the opposite side of the throttle housing actually reverses the motor's direction of rotation, or could it be that your motor simply runs in the wrong direction regardless of which side of the throttle housing the lever is fitted?
If simply moving the lever to the opposite side of the throttle housing
does actually reverse the motor's direction of rotation
(i.e. the motor shaft rotates counterclockwise when forward throttle is applied) then the throttle unit will need to be altered somehow to allow the correct rotation of the motor, or the regenerative braking
(and cruise control) would only work in reverse.
I don't know what throttles you are using or if it's possible to either rotate the lever 180 degrees when it is swapped to the other side of the housing. Perhaps the curved magnetic strip on the lower end of the lever that controls the Hall Sensor signal can be rotated 180 degrees so that its magnetic poles are effectively reversed.
However, if moving the handle to the opposite side of the throttle housing does not alter the motors direction of rotation (i.e. the motor shaft still rotates clockwise when forward throttle is applied) then the motor's default direction of rotation will need to be reversed by altering the configuration of the Phase and Hall Sensor wiring if the default direction of rotation is wrong for your particular installation.
Check out this post for further details.Also, if you were planning on fitting a counterclockwise propeller on one hull
(as is often done on dual drive systems) to balance out the torque reaction of the two propellers, you would still need to reverse the default direction of rotation on one of the motors, but I don't suppose contra-rotating motors and propellers would make any noticeable difference on a catamaran.
Alan