Hi Everyone,

I've been asked by a client of mine to design an electronic motor controller
for some low-ish current (30A peak) 36 or 48 volt motors and I got to
thinking that I could probably design it so I can "add more silicon" and get
it to the stage were it could drive golf carts, it would be a more useful
product.

The problem is that I can't seem to find any specifications on what golf
cart motors consume.. I see that they run on between 36 and 48 volts, but
I've not seen any current specs.

Can anyone point me at some reliable information on this?

I'm looking at a Microprocessor controlled full H-Bridge system with a
serial interface for programming various parameters like accel and decel
rates, speed limits, and even be controllable from the serial port. It would
"normally" be operated by a pot-box. It will support regen and be able to
limit it so that it doesn't "over charge" the battery pack..

Running some numbers on various MOSFETs I would expect I can get a 100A
continuos rating without too much trouble (and a good heatsink). Would that
be enough? I'm figuring I can get away with just one 80A MOSFET per leg for
the 30A version, and go up to 3 or 4 per leg for the high current one
(different MOSFETs, but that isn't a bit problem).

I haven't done a high current H-bridge before, but I've been doing a lot of
reading, would anyone familiar with them be interested in critiquing my
"rough design"? Is there an email list for this kind of thing?

Thanks for your help guys..
Cheers,
Ash.

---
Ashley Roll
Digital Nemesis Pty Ltd
www.digitalnemesis.com
Mobile: +61 (0)417 705 718


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