- Disconnected the power harness + the brake signal cable to the MP4 motor - the bike accelerates past 54 kph and reaches a top speed of 58 kph without the braking or regen problem kicking in.
I would not recommend high speed use with no battery connected to the controller, as there would be nothing attached top the controller to absorb the excess voltage being produced at the higher motor rpm.
The voltage generated passes into the controller and will become far too high, which will could damage the capacitors in the controller, as they are only rated for up to 63V.
I don't think this has anything to do with the rpm setting in the controller
(which I seem to recall only allows a maximum entry of 380 rpm anyway) it is simply down to the motor's velocity constant
(Kv or rpm/volts ratio) and the speed the motor is being driven at.
A running motor generates a back-EMF proportional to its rpm. Once the motor's rotational velocity is such that the back-EMF is equal to the battery voltage, the motor reaches its limit speed.
If this speed is exceeded, then the current will automatically begin to flow in the opposite direction, which would result in charge flowing into the battery and reverse torque being applied to the motor, hence the electromagnetic dynamic braking effect
(just like regen) that you have experienced.
By applying full throttle at high rpm, you are effectively providing a pathway for the reverse current to flow back through the controller and into the battery.
Releasing the throttle completely, removes the pathway for the current to flow through the controller in either direction.
So, no power can be delivered to the motor below its maximum rpm/battery voltage and also no power is taken from the motor
(and no electromagnetic dynamic braking force is produced) above its maximum rpm/battery voltage.
If you tried the same experiment with a 24V battery on the front wheel you should experience a similar braking effect, but at ~27km/h instead of 54km/h.
If you insert a switch into the throttle signal wire going to the front motor, this would allow the front throttle to be disabled at high speed
(without disabling the rear throttle) and this should enable those extra 4km/h to be extracted from the rear motor.
Alan