gazza19
Über Member
- Location
- halifax west yorkshire
Yep my 36v 250w kit has a 15 Amp fuse, never 'blown' it.Which fuse are you fitting as a replacement? Assuming the motor is drawing a maximum of 250Watt no matter what condition the battery is in, and ignoring potential overheads from the control circuit The current draw could range from 6.3A to 8.4A (given the battery won't necessarily be 36V, assuming a bank of 10x lithium ion batteries in series, it could be anything between 40V when fully charged to 30v when they are near fully discharged) , this would mean you'll need at least a 10A fuse, maybe 15A.
Goes off to check...........36v 250w kit has a 30 amp fuseYep my 36v 250w kit has a 15 Amp fuse, never 'blown' it.
Hmm, sounds like your motor and/or wiring could 'blow' to protect the fuse!Goes off to check...........36v 250w kit has a 30 amp fuse
Been OK for the last 3 yearsHmm, sounds like your motor and/or wiring could 'blow' to protect the fuse!![]()
I knew someone once who used a metal nail as a fuse... seriously - he told me that he had run out of fuses!Been OK for the last 3 years
I knew someone once who used a metal nail as a fuse... seriously - he told me that he had run out of fuses!
It's OK until the moment when you actually NEED a fuse which is when it is NOT OK because the fuse (or nail!) doesn't blow...
I'm not saying that 30 A is definitely too high a rating but it does sound high by @the_mikey and my calculations.
No lights and the kit bought from cyclotricity in the UK15A seems about right, maybe the battery is running lights and other things, which would need to be taken into account although at 36v, we're talking maybe 500mA of extra current, and that's being very generous.