man. You might have burnt that motor up good. You might need a new motor. Lucky you didn't kill yourself. you might wanner buy a kill switch lol you sure you know what your doing??
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When you have a motor controller or anything electrical with no definitions, no operating instructions, no warnings, and no user manual, then I was literally flying blind. Who wants to put a hood over your head and jump in the cockpit next? Don't be shy. I wasn't. LOLman. You might have burnt that motor up good. You might need a new motor. Lucky you didn't kill yourself. you might wanner buy a kill switch lol you sure you know what your doing??
LMAO The software should not have allowed it PERIOD no matter if the engine could handle it not. There is no logical reason on this planet why you would ever need or want to bring an electric motor from 3500 RPM to 0 in 1 revolution. 3500 to 0 RPM in 1 revolution is like hitting a brick wall. That can't be a good thing.Not all chinese junk has sails.
The motor should not mind a hard stop. The Hall sensors are stationary - they should not be affected at all by a hard stop.
Don't blame the software. The motor should not have failed.
It might have been 75 milliseconds. I didn't have time to clock it. It was almost an instantaneous stop as hard as that is to believe. I was less than 2 feet from it. LOLDoubtful it stopped in 17 milliseconds. No way it made more than a 'thunk" if it did.
We stop servos that hard all day long.
You can blame the software for doing exactly what it was written to do - which should have had no effect on a quality motor.
Open it up & post some pics - let's see what really failed.
I forgot to add the resistor for the Magura Throttle. Innocent enough. I just turned the key to shut down the motor. Then I left the motor running to thumb through the tabs to check the readings until I hit the "Test" tab. All innocence was lost after that on that one mouse click. LOLDoubtful it stopped in 17 milliseconds. No way it made more than a 'thunk" if it did.
We stop servos that hard all day long.
You can blame the software for doing exactly what it was written to do - which should have had no effect on a quality motor.
Open it up & post some pics - let's see what really failed.
You know more than I do. If you say it can then it can. My motor's pretty on the outside though. Not worth a dang on the inside. LMAOThe chinese booger glue holding the magnet probably failed.
Still the motor at fault. I am standing 2 feet from one of these:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Fanuc-A06B-0502-B001-AC-Servo-Motor-Model-20S-/321706165039?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4ae72e832f
It is making 1 inch moves - shoving 1,000 pounds of CNC table Y axis @ 840 inches per minute. That means it accelerates, moves 1 inch & stops that load in under 150 milliseconds. It had been running these parts all day. Machine was made in 1986, and the x & y motors are original PM 3 phase brushless motors.
A quality motor will slam to a stop a hundred times an hour without damage.
Pull the cover and fan off? Easy for you to say. I will attempt it.Mike:
That motor is a Golden HPM right?
Pull the cover & fan off the back end of it & post a picture of it.
Does the shaft rotate at all, or is it locked solid?
Yeah I know that, but damn did it have it be the motor? Motor death by mouse click? That is beyond ridiculous even for a screw up like me. LOLWhen you're building on the cutting edge you got to expect to break some stuff. That's how you eventually get it right.
Now what do I do? I don't want to go smacking on the thing if something else is holding it together.Mike:
That motor is a Golden HPM right?
Pull the cover & fan off the back end of it & post a picture of it.
Does the shaft rotate at all, or is it locked solid?
I only got one question. How could there be ZERO clearance between the battery cables and the motor yet the motors shaft is dead center as normal? LOLGood, that is a start.
We will not be beating on any part of a motor. Hammers are not for motor work.
This is the only information Golden would send me on the motor:
http://www.goldenmotor.com/hubmotors/hubmotor-imgs/HPM%2010KW-Drawing%20(Fan%20Cooling).pdf
Use a flashlight, and look to see where the wires go. If they are headed for the shaft end of things, it is probably a classic outrunner. Post a pic of that if you can.