Hi everybody
I have a GM prokit 901 and a 36V 12Ah LiFePO4 battery bought in april this year. Probably one of the best decisions I have ever made:D We have recently moved to a place that is slightly more hilly so I have been thinking about increasing the power a little bit and maybe the range aswell. I have learned alot by reading this forum over the last months but I am still confused about a few things. Especially the electric part. It would be great if someone would have the time to answer a some of my questions / correct or confirm my current understanding!
I've read that the GM controller I have is limited to 15A. This means that my bike is running on max 36V * 15A = 540W. If I buy a 48V battery I would get 720W. And if I buy a 36V 16Ah battery I would get improved distance but not power due to the 15 A limit. Correct?
On the GM website I find the following info about the LiFePO4 batteries :
Max Discharge Current: 35A(12AH)/60A(16AH)
Max Continuous Discharge Current: 20A(12AH)/30A(16AH)
Are these numbers correct? This means that without the controller limit of 15 A max, my 12 Ah battery system could give me 20A * 36V = 720 W continuous and 36v*30A=1080 Max. I guess this would make a big difference in performance. And if I get a 36V 16 battery the numbers would be 1080W continuous and 2160 Max (if controller and wires could take 60A?)
Regarding the max discharge current. How long is this discharge, seconds, a minute, a short hill?
I don't need a strong powerbike, but a slight increase would be great. I guess the easiest way to achieve this is to buy a 48V battery giving me 720W without changing/modding the controller in any way (also no need to change controller settings). I could then carry the 36V I currently have as a spare for long rides. I understand that this would probably ruin the leds on my throttle as they are made for 36V (if I don't build some extra functionality).
Another option would be to buy another controller or modding my existing one. I don't have any experience with soldering so I am not sure if modding is a smart way to go. I have found this post from Alan
http://goldenmotor.com/SMF/index.php?topic=4072.msg23115#msg23115 . However, I don't understand 100% what is gained here or if this would be a good approach for me. By altering the amplifier does the Amp limit double??
If I bought a 36V 16Ah battery, and had a controller which settings were 30A continuous and 60A Max discharge, and then changed to use my old 36V12Ah battery without changing the controller settings, would then the
BMS in the last battery make sure that the 36V12Ah battery would be running within its safety sone? Or could possibly a Cycle Analyst be used to change max Amps on the fly? I'm not sure if it is clear what I mean here, I want to know if the
BMS is always making sure that the battery is working within its limits or if some other agent is necessary?
If I buy another controller, the Lyen is mentioned on this forum, is it plug and play or do I have to fix alot of wires and stuff? Would this be a good way to go? My current controller often gets really hot, If another controller stayed cool it would one less thing to worry about.
I don't need higher top speed ( have 700C wheels so it already runs at around 40 km/h) so I'm leaning towards buying the 36V 16A battery from GM and using my old one as a spare/backup if I could get passed the 15 A limit.
I would really appreciate any comments and suggestions
Thanks for the help!
Jan