I see from your previous photos that the correct Phase wires and Hall Sensor wires appear to have already been transposed to allow the motor's default direction of rotation to be anticlockwise to suit your scooter, therefore it should not be a permanently engaged Reverse mode causing the lack of regen force.
I have also
translated your battery pack
(Accu) details for the benefit of others reading this thread:
Unfortunately, your battery pack's rated
Maximum charging current (with the battery temperature above 10°C) is only
20A but your
Reverse charging current (A) is set to
47A, which is too high for your battery:
The lack of regenerative braking force could be due to the battery's
BMS preventing the regen current from reaching the battery.
You ideally need to check the voltage across the controller's battery terminals (
B+ and
B-)
(when the brakes are applied at speed) to confirm whether regen voltage is being produced.
If the voltage at the controller noticeably rises, but there is no obvious braking force being applied by the regen, it may be that the
BMS is preventing reverse voltage/current flow to the battery.
Measuring the voltage across the charge connector terminals during regen should confirm this if the charge connector voltage does not noticeably rise during high speed regen.
Are you able to spin the back wheel with the scooter on its stand to see if the rear wheel stops quicker when you apply the
front brake with the throttle applied
(or released), compared to just releasing the throttle?
It was also interesting to see that the 18650 cells in your battery can still be discharged even in temperatures as low as
-20°C, albeit at a reduced discharge rate of 0.5C
(1.25A/cell).
Alan