Maybe he was going on about me missing adding up the resistance of the entire circuit, batteries
BMS cables and motor resistances I tire of just listing them.
Stuff that! The guys an electric engineer, I should need to work all that out for him?
Makes me work, with no fun.
So then Rather than poke fun Thaialien, show me your stuff as I have my balls in a knot getting any sense out of your posts to make anything real, So we just make sh!t up, if you cant give us some real tech data you may learn how to get it along the way..
Internal resistance of your pack?
The resistance of your motor windings?
The resistance of your fets?
The resistance of your PCB tracks.
The resistance of your cables and connections?
The resistance of your current shunt in use.
Start by the pack you use? Maybe I spend three day searching for the specs on this,
Give me some current tests on you
BMS through a good temp co-efficient resistor, now that would make things a lot easier. We could maybe find out the resistance of your whole pack minus the motor then we just use the data 52v/17 amps to get 3 ohms and subtract the battery bms resistance. Take a poke at the motor resistance and subtract it, subtract your on-fet resistances, subtract your test resistor, and your shunt value should be remaining.
I cant afford a milliohm meter, maybe the electric engineer thiaalien has a milliohm meter and can help us instead of stinking up the board, give us some good resistance values on the GM motors.
Run a battery cell through your motor phase wires two on the negative and one phase on the positive in wye, you must know the internal resistance of the battery cell to be accurate and get the current draw from this circuit.
say the cell is 3.3v and you draw 5 amps through the phase wires. 3.3v/5A=.66 ohms. an electrical engineer could figure out this one. Even I can and I am a newbie..
You getting 17 amps at 52v?
3 ohms. Tooooo much resistance.
We said the perfect system would need 1.66 ohms to make 1400 watts @ 48v.
1.34 ohms to high. You want more amps?
Damn this two page effort of getting the details to do a proper calculation. LOL I had to get most of the data myself to get it this far. The PDF on his motor was not on the GM site, I spent ages tracking it down and found it buried on ES.
I thought an electronics laboratory scientist would of been able to discuss the finer points of my posts without going postal. At least Thaialian may of put some pencil to pad and do some of the work. Even a picture of the dear bike and his work on it would give this member some personality.