OK--to summarize so far:
48V GM 20" front hub
48V GM Regen Controller--the big black one with the resistors and diodes on the back of the board
40 NIMH 10AH 5C D cells in series--about 57 volts freshly charged--nominally 48V
Put it all together and am unable to find a phase combination that gives torque on the ground.
The instructions on the GM site for phase setting don't apply to this controller: to step between options you "bump" the throttle for s second--I guess it is an improvement--you don't have to flip the switch. Finally sort out the procedure with Tom:
- Short purple-black pair
turn on system
bump throttle
observe
bump throttle
observe
. . . . .
until you figure out the pattern and can stop on the best one--which is still nothing like how the motor really runs.
unplug the purple-black jumper
bump throttle again
cycle power
test
Now it should smoothly spin up fast.
I could get this far but when I put the wheel to the ground performance was pathetic and it sucked a lot of juice.
Some one Endless Sphere suggested swapping green and yellow on both the power and hall effect wires. I did this and I think it got a little better but I don't know--I can make it sort of work like this under every combination of wires I have tried. I just can't make it run right.
We built an LED Hall Effect test jig and it showed that all the sensors were working and firing in the order Blue, Green, Yellow, and back to Blue again.
I opened up the hub and found the power wires attached in an arc: Blue Yellow Green
I opened the other side and found the hall effect wires attached in the same order but on the other side of the wheel so in opposite order of rotation.
So I am thinking this is a two step switcheroo: first we need to swap the yellow and the green to map the observed firing order of the hall effect sensors with the order in which the wires are soldered on the board. Second, we need to swap the end points--the blue and the green--to reverse the order so the sides of the wheel (power and hall) are going the same way as the wheel is spinning.
I dug out my oscilloscope and put it across Blue and Green; Green and Yellow; and Blue and Yellow power wire pairs. The patterns looked pretty much the same at full tilt.
My batts are charging and I'll try in on the ground tomorrow.
I must say that the workmanship on this hub is far better than it was on my GM 36 V from 2006 or so. I had been planning to seal the flange with some sort of gasket goo for waterproofing but decided that the fit was tight enough without it and that I would just make a mess if I put it on.
I have photos of inside the hub and the scope screens for each pair if I could figure out how to include them.