I have just been studying your photos of the controller, and there is a much larger 78M05 on the upper side of the top PCB that I think is far more likely to be the +5V regulator chip, so I'm puzzled as to what the SM5B chip is for.
The SM5B chip is a 75V buck converter, so I think it's taking the high voltage from the battery or the regen and stepping it down to a voltage below 25V for the 78M05 chip to produce the 5V. Seems a bit crazy given its tiny size.
I was actually looking for a shunt that controls the current (like all of the earlier square wave controllers had) but I could not see one.
I guess it must use a section of copper track on the PCB instead.
As you've already stated, a circuit diagram for this controller would indeed be very useful.
High voltages carrying smaller currents can get away with smaller shunts so it may not be obvious - smd components make reverse engineering quite challenging!
I have a hypothesis that the
BMS went into charge protection mode and cut the connection to the battery so the motor would be generating with no load to keep the voltage down - however based on what I think I've learned is that the MP5 is supposed to prevent this from happening. Maybe reducing the regen current down from 50A would help, though the
BMS never seems to see this amount.
The
BMS does provide logs but I'm not convinced of its accuracy. I've attached a couple of edited screenshots showing values for one cell over the duration of the ride, the whole pack, and a zoomed in area at the point of failure.
Resolution is only 1 min. However, if there is a 4V sag at 30A draw, then there's likely to be a 4V surge charging at 30A, and if that happens for longer than the
BMS overvoltage duration threshold, then it could cut the
BMS and leave the regen without a load, and possibly cause the voltage to exceed 75V.
The failure happened in this last case after slowing down from full speed in one braking action, so it could have caused the
BMS to trigger. Pulsed braking or reducing regen current could perhaps avoid this too, but I would really miss it.
It gives me something to experiment with.
I could go back to my 12S lipo pack which doesn't have a
BMS as I charge it at 12A with a balancing charger in two sessions.
I'd prefer to use the 14S with the
BMS, as it's much higher capacity and I can charge it at 5A in one session and know the cells are protected even if the balancing current has no hope to balance 16 cells in parallel!
So, I think I'll replace the chip again, and use the 14S without the
BMS and charge it in stages as I used to do.
If it fails again in a similar situation, then I'll know it wasn't the
BMS!