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I've tried to figure out how to do regen on this controller, but I've got nothing. I've figured out how to activate the brake through the high line. Seems a bit weird to run full battery pack voltage to the handle bars but what ever.

Zenid wrote:You shouldn't have to be putting full bank voltage to the 'handlebars or whatever'!![]()
For activating the ebrake, it's just 12V positive to the white wire to cut off the controller. Usually this is accomplished by simply wiring it into the brake light circuit (brake light = 12V+ when brakes applied). See my wiring guide:
http://zenid10.wordpress.com/category/3-components-specs/3-4-controllers/3-4-1-generic-72v-controller/

wesnewell wrote:So what do we use when we don't have a 12V converter? All I've got is 100V coming from the 24s lipo battery pack. If I understand you correctly, Brake-Hi just turns the controller off when pulled high? I assume that will shut off cruise control too?



auraslip wrote:So I ended up installing a 2.2k resistor rather than the SMD resistors. Some napkin math calculation says it should hit LVC near 37v (or 2.3v per cell for 16s).




Zenid wrote:wesnewell wrote:So what do we use when we don't have a 12V converter? All I've got is 100V coming from the 24s lipo battery pack. If I understand you correctly, Brake-Hi just turns the controller off when pulled high? I assume that will shut off cruise control too?
Yes, brake-hi switches off the controller when you send 12V into it, and it cuts off cruise control too..
Are you telling me you don't have a 12V system at all? If so, then what's powering your headlights and indicators, and - more importantly - your brake light?![]()
All vehicles as I know them have a 12V system for this purpose...

auraslip wrote:Related: you can see by my finger where I tried to drill a hole through the trace to run a resistor to ground. The drill bit was too big, and ate through all of the trace so I had to make a little jumper to the otherside.
auraslip wrote:One problem I had was the meanwells kept shutting down if I drew too much power. I don't know what that's about?






auraslip wrote:Don't mean at all to be rude, but research voltage dividers and how they work to understand what's going on here.

auraslip wrote:Ok. It doesn't help that none of the parts are labeled in this section of the board.
Basically, from VCC there are SMD two resistors in series. After them, there is one SMD resistor that leads to the MCU and another SMD resistor that leads to ground. This last resistor is the one you need to remove and raise the value of.
auraslip wrote:Drilling a hole in the trace is a bit of a pain though. Need a real small drill bit.







auraslip wrote:I've looked at the board and tried to figure out what is what WRT to switching the phase. One yellow wire goes to ground, and the other goes to a pad near the output side of the board. I cant' for the life of me figure out which it is though! Dammit. Gonna have to get pictures, or experiment![]()



auraslip wrote:BTW, have you figured out regen or 3 speeds on these? I'm assuming ds, sl, ybs, xs, and ybk are the ones to ground.

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