Hi Ray and
to the forum.
What size wheels do you have, and how fast were you travelling when you braked to turn around?
I do own 2 other cheap ebay electric wheels the battery works on my other 48v ebike so its not the battery or the BMS.
What battery do you have, and is it a Golden Motor battery?
If it is not a GM battery, what are its maximum charge and continuous discharge current ratings?
I am wondering whether the battery's
BMS may be abruptly disconnecting the battery
(electronically) from the controller during high regen current at high rpm, resulting in a big voltage spike within the controller that the battery is no longer able to absorb, which could explain the failure.
If your other bikes produce a similar level of regen current and voltage, then perhaps their controllers are just a bit more tolerant of voltage spikes than the Magic Pie's controller? Although, I would expect the Magic Pie to produce a higher voltage at the same rpm
(compared to your other motors)which, because of its much larger diameter, is likely to have more magnets moving much faster past a higher number of stator coils.
It seems too coincidental for two different controllers to fail quite so quickly in very similar circumstances, therefore I think it is more likely that something other than the controller that is responsible for the failure in this instance.
It might be the battery's
BMS, or it could even be a poor
(intermittent) physical or soldered connection somewhere on the battery supply, including the main power switch contacts,
(assuming one is fitted) that is failing
(momentarily going open circuit) while high current is being passed through it.
Alan