Could it be that my soldering of the wires between the battery/CA shunt/controller is not up to scratch and that could cause this problem?
Hi Ben, I think the cutting out problem is most likely occurring because the current protection circuit inside the battery is being overloaded.
According to the specifications of your battery, it is set to deliver a constant current of 10 Amps and a peak current of 20 Amps, and your Magic Pie is probably trying to pull a lot more than 10 Amps of current from the battery on hills and during hard acceleration. If the current being drawn is more than the battery is designed to deliver then the internal Battery Management System
(BMS) will automatically disconnect the power to prevent excessive current draw. When this occurs, the voltage will instantly drop until it falls low enough to activate the Low Voltage Cut-off
(LVC) in the controller.
I suspect that the battery voltage will jump straight back up as soon as the controller cuts out, and the controller is only able to reset itself after the power has been turned completely off and then back on again.
Reducing the current settings in the controller should reduce
(or eventually eliminate) the cutting out, but the assistance is going to be noticeably reduced too.
I think it will be a case of trial and error to find the highest settings that do not cause the battery's
BMS to cut out.
I suspect that battery is easily capable of continuously delivering the maximum amount of legally permissible power under EU laws, but I think you may find that the motor's assistance will be very poor and disappointing with only 5 Amps of current.
When you soldered the regen cable onto the horn switch, did it matter what colour went to which connector ?
Gregor, those type of momentary switches usually contain a small copper disc:
The disc
(or sometimes a springy metal strip) simply completes the circuit between the two contacts when the button is depressed.
As the switching operation is purely mechanical it is not polarity sensitive, so it does not matter which way around the two wires are soldered onto the two switch contacts.
Alan