Rather than build batteries boxes,
I just threw the batteries onto our wagon and did the wiring instead.
This way we could verify we really wanted 48V. I'm also hoping to slip
in a lawn mowing soon by towing the batteries on the wagon. It was
really nice to just twist the key to start, rather than quickly
connecting and disconnecting arcy sparky jumper cables!
At
24V all worked well. At 36V we blew the automotive 175 Amp fusible
link, even though we were getting current draws of only around 20 to 35
Amps. It was probably a mistake to put a 12V automotive fuse in a 36V
system. We put in a big 200A, 72V rated fuse and everything was fine.
On 48V nominal the motor spins 3300 rpm. That's about perfect, the gas motor was nominally 3600 rpm.
As I expected, the Amp draws did not go up significantly with higher voltage, even though the tractor was much
faster.
In
4th gear, it is a pretty honest run to keep up with it. It is way
faster than my old lawn tractor! It was also nice, though, to put it
into first and crawl up the curb. 4th gear uphill up our street at a
running pace was about 50 Amps. Downhill was about 17A. The regen is nice, the tractor holds a nice steady speed downhill.
There is more work to do:
o The clutch is dragging. I had adjusted it to get belts on and off, so it probably just needs adjustment.
o
I used the starter relay to switch power to the field. It gets hot,
apparently it is only designed to be used briefly to start the motor. I
can either replace it with a real contactor, or put on a coil
economizer. A coil economizer is a simple circuit with a capacitor and
resistor that lets the relay get a full kick at first, to slam the
contacts home, but them lessens the current to hold the state.
o
I calculated the motor should draw 124A at 48V to make its rated 8 hp.
We never ran over 1/2 that. I thought the motor was hotter than I
expected after some testing. However, we were spinning the motor at 1/2
speed on 24V for much of the testing. Slower motor = slower internal fan
speed = less cooling. We'll try 48V and high fan speeds the whole time
next test.
o
I'm going to add a reed switch that will guarantee the field has current
before switching on the armature. If the field ever breaks connection,
the motor could quickly overspeed and/or overcurrent. This will also let
the high inductance field build up some current before switching on the
armature. This will prevent the very brief current surge and higher rpm
if you switch them on together (the field builds up current much slower
than the armature in a sepex motor, so the motor draws a brief surge of
current and spins fast as the field catches up a fraction of a second
later).
o I need to still do battery boxes.
On a personal note, my son and daughter have been helping me with this project. It has been great fun!