Can anyone tell me if a higher amperage is better on a battery protection board. Some are advertised as 20 or 25A, but some are 45A. My battery will be 48V
It is important that the board is rated at a higher amps than your battery is capable of, this has little to do with just the voltage, as you appear to believe.
Whatever amps your can supply (this is a factor of the type and rating of the cells used, and how many have been placed in sets of series connected, parallel blocks).
The number of cells in series gives the voltage, the number in each in parallel give the current
There is generally a number somewhere on the battery that starts with the voltage, in your case 48.
With some numbers and letters, find that and put it here on your question.
You might want to review this Video to give you a better appreciation:-
The higher the current handling on the BMS board, the higher the cost.
So its a balance between cost and safety, if you like.
Usually, unless its very close to the possible high current of the battery, the next higher current value BMS board can be chosen.
Other than price, there is little difference, no real "gains" to be made with a board that can say handle twice the current, but a board rated at the same current or less than the battery can supply, will probably run hotter, and may break down earlier....
Maybe causing possible cell damage as well. Do not ever risk that.
Bike Controllers, in my limited experience, may have an electronic adjustment for maximum current (mine does), that is to extend the distance you can travel on one charge, or to allow a higher bike speed (more current), but with a reduced distance possible.
All of these are variables that some controllers can "control".
I hope this all makes sense for you.
regards
Andy