Hi I have just converted my MTB with a Chinese 36v hub motor kit and a KT-LED880 handlebar controller...
I am using some old batteries from my previous e-bike, including one LiFePo4, 12 cell, which I am getting at rest voltage of 3.32v per cell and overall 39.9v.
This does not work on the e-bike, with the controller cutting out and giving a low voltage indication. My other battery pack (a Li-Pox10 giving out 42v), works fine (though it doesn't show full voltage indicator on the KT-LED880).
The KT-LED is marketed as a 36v/48v controller and I am wondering how intelligently this works - does it have any way to set or detect the actual battery voltage? or does it just cut out below 40v (i.e. to protect a 48v battery)?
If this is the case, is there any way to set the cut-out voltage (which I would rather have at least at 36v!) or do I need to replace it with a controller that actually is designed for 36v or is smarter? If so suggestions are welcome...
Thanks
I am using some old batteries from my previous e-bike, including one LiFePo4, 12 cell, which I am getting at rest voltage of 3.32v per cell and overall 39.9v.
This does not work on the e-bike, with the controller cutting out and giving a low voltage indication. My other battery pack (a Li-Pox10 giving out 42v), works fine (though it doesn't show full voltage indicator on the KT-LED880).
The KT-LED is marketed as a 36v/48v controller and I am wondering how intelligently this works - does it have any way to set or detect the actual battery voltage? or does it just cut out below 40v (i.e. to protect a 48v battery)?
If this is the case, is there any way to set the cut-out voltage (which I would rather have at least at 36v!) or do I need to replace it with a controller that actually is designed for 36v or is smarter? If so suggestions are welcome...
Thanks
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