G'day again,
Well, I fitted a spacer and the wheel is now spinning freely. One problem solved.
(the aussie dollar has dropped heaps in the last three months making a Ping 48v 20Ah over 4 times that of four 12v 17.5Ah in the form of new 900 amp jumpstarter packs) and am currently fitting the batteries in a pair of wine cooler bags to hang of each side of my rack, although I fear they are a bit small height wise.
I can't imagine how I'm going to handle all the weight on the rear of this bike. Time wil tell I guess.
Thanks again for the ideas and solutions, I'm sure I will be back.
Yes missing spacers is not only bad for the bikes health. In reality it is very dangerous for your health, if the gear changer gets locked up in the cassete while your riding fast you could end up in hospital or worse.
The SLA path is scary but can work, id try to keep those lead batteries away from the back and find someway of strapping them onto the frame. I used rubber inner tubes for this as they never ever failed me, they are acid proof, weather proof, shock resistant, and they held 20 kg of lead to my frame flawlesly.
The aussie dollar lol. Its like our uranium and primary resources are worth less than dang batteries that fry in 5 minutes, only god, balance, yin yang, "what eva" knows what the real exchange rate is and will even things out in the end.
Another safety issue to watch for is that the twist grip hal controller works from an analogue hal sensor and gets stuck full ON if the power is cut to the sensor while in operation, just a loose lead and you are in deep doo. Its happened to me twice on a new designed controller when the twist grip broke and came off in my hand, and the old designed controller when the plug shook lose, and Ive nearly had bad accidents because of this oversight.
Below is a link to the what I think is related to what is going on with the stuck at full speed when the power is cut to the throttle. By no means is there a solution here to the GM controller problem but more proof of concept.
http://hades.mech.northwestern.edu/wiki/index.php/PIC_PWM_Motor_DriverSignal Conditioner (Optional)
There is a problem with leaving out the signal conditioner part of the circuit. Sure you can program your controller to output your control signal scaled to 0 to +5v, but when it will likely reset to 0v at some point. 0v to the PIC corresponds to full speed in one direction. You want 0v to the circuit to mean 0 speed to the motor, or 0v (IN) = 2.5v (PIC). For this you can build a simple op-amp circuit.
Ive fried two controllers trying to fix this very dangerous problem. Well I dragged the solder wick across one controller powered, the other one I blew up "stupid reverse polarity" that said I was trying stuff to fix this bug...
I was thinking of adding a resistor to the output and the ground to help discharge the 3.8 volts that gets stuck when the power is cut.^ Im confused now.
Well again my bike is in the sick bay waiting for another controller. Im going to try to fix the one that I reversed the polarity cause im sure its just the power regulators...