Thanks that's what I thought. Just hoped there might be a work around.no there can bus locked to only work with a bosch controller
You haven't actually mentioned anything about the battery pack. A 20A fuse won't typically blow at 20A they normally have a tolerance above. The whole point is how much stress you are putting each individual cell under when the discharge rate is close to their maximum repeatedly. You design in over-capacity so the cells get an easier life and less chance of failing and leading to a fire which will engulf the whole battery pack. 20A at 36V is 720W. I've got a 48V 13Ah battery pack that allows for 25A sustained output and 30A momentary peak and should be safe but smaller battery packs may only provide 15A sustained output and perhaps 20A momentary peak which would be completely unsafe for that application. It would be fine for a hub motor controller that only peaks around 11A and is sustained at about 7-8A. Also bear in mind many battery packs over-state specification a little bit.Oh dear, another scaremongering ebike fire pic!
250w rated (as in continuous power) are perfectly able to develop peak powers well in excess of 250w as has been said but this is perfectly normal and legal so to do.
Let's say there's a peak power of 800W (not likely BTW, but worst case and all that!) and the battery is nominally 36v - that gives a current 800/36 = 22 Amps which in lithium ebike battery terms is no great shake and certainly not huge.
For my own TSDZ2 (36v 250w) I use a 10Ah bottle battery which has a 20Amp fuse at the discharge port and whilst I rarely do so, I have ocassionally ridden at max assist just for the fun of it and the fuse has not blown.