Hi Saravanan and
to the forum.
If the battery voltage is dropping to ~5V when you connect the controller to the battery, then there is probably a fault with one of the following:
- The battery or its BMS
- The battery supply wiring
- The controller itself
Try connecting a 110/220V 100W incandescent light bulb across your battery and see if it lights. A 110V bulb should light much brighter than a 220V bulb on a 72V battery as it will be drawing a higher current due to its lower resistance.
If the bulb lights up
(and the battery still reads more than 72V) then connect the controller to the battery
as well as the bulb. If the bulb then goes off and the battery voltage drops completely, it could be a short circuit somewhere in the battery cables or possibly a short within the controller itself causing the
BMS to cut the power from the battery, but I would expect this to be accompanied by a big spark when the battery wire from the controller was connected to the battery.
Disconnecting one of the battery leads from the controller's battery terminals should cause the bulb to light up again
if the problem was being caused by a fault inside the controller.
However, if the bulb remains unlit, it is more likely to be a short circuit between the "
+" and "
-" battery cables.
Alan