First of all, I'm glad I found this site. I've had this little private project going for two years and its nice to finally be able to ask advice from people with experience.
Anyways, I started this project two years ago. Its an electric utility cart made from a lawn tractor. I started with an old John Deere 185, as you can see in the pictures. I removed the engine, mower deck, trans-dif, seat and fender. I replaced them with the motor from an electric forklift, the five speed trans dif from an old white lawn mower, and a bus seat. I also added a second bench seat which folds down into a utility deck, and power the whole thing with two marine deep cycle batteries. All I'm lacking is a good speed control for the switch. Any suggestions on where I can obtain said switch would be appreciated.
easy to install speed control
Sat, 12/08/2007 - 18:59
#1
easy to install speed control
Who's online
There are currently 0 users online.
Who's new
- eric01
- Norberto
- sarim
- Edd
- OlaOst
Your motor is probably pretty beefy, yes? If so maybe you want a beefy controller. By "speed controller for the switch" do you mean that big yellow lever?
It's typical to have a variable throttle which uses a 0-5000 ohm variable resistor, that connects to a controller that varies the speed to the motor.
- David Herron, The Long Tail Pipe, davidherron.com, 7gen.com, What is Reiki
The yellow lever is the gear shift for the five speed transaxle.
I know I need a variable resistor or something like that, but I just can't seem to find one. Do you have any ideas on where I can find one?
Hi,
Most folks (99.9%) don't use a variable resistor to directly control the voltage to the motor. Instead they use a controller (Alltrax is most popular, Kelly is newer and cheaper - but unknown). The controller (usually) takes an input from a variable resistor (say 0 to 5 k-ohm - but at a much lower voltage). The controller then varies the power to the motor by controlling the duty cycle of a square wave which oscillates at about 15kHz.
I think you have a 24V system, right? What amp draw do you expect? You could also look for golf cart controllers - which might be cheaper than Alltrax.
It is possible to use a variable resistor directly - but because of the high amp draw it has to be large (and it's also inefficient because it wastes energy as heat). I've seen some home brew continually variable resistors - I've also seen some home brew 2 or 3 position systems. I'll see if I can dig up something if you want to go that route.
John H. Founder of Current Motor Company - opinions on this site belong to me; not to my employer
Remember: " 'lectric for local. diesel for distance" - JTH, Amp Bros || "No Gas.
Yes it is a 24 volt system, and the motor is supposed to draw around 50-75 amps, though I think it can handle more.
I just need something that will be easy to hook up. I thought of using a golf cart controller, but I was allways afraid of frying it when I first hook it up. I did try to use a controller from an electric scooter with 24 volt system, but the supplier refused to label the connections showing me which wire went where. Instead, he gave me a wireing diagram that could barely be read. Not to mention that it took nearly a month to get the thing.
Anyways, thanks for the help.
A golf cart controller isn't really that hard to install, and is probably your best bet. The connections are labeled: motor(M+, M-), Battery(B+, B-), and throttle (there are three or four: two for the throttle, one to power the controller, and sometimes one to limit the speed in reverse) you will need an appropriate pot, usually 0-5k ohm. most important is to get the battery polarity right, but if you use color coded wire (red for positive, Black for negative), this is a no-brainer. if you have trouble, there are wiring diagrams available in pdf format online for most brands.
Okay, its easy to install, but do they even make a 24 volt golf cart controller? I can get the pot from radio shack but I have to search for the controller. Or would a 36 volt controller also work?
Yes, they make 24 volt golf cart controllers. the curtis 1204 is one. alltrax makes controllers from 12-72 volts.check out this page: http://cloudelectric.com/controllers?b=1 you could also use a 36 volt controller, but you would need to get a third battery, and find out if the motor you have can run at the higher voltage without getting too hot.
Thanks for the link. I think I found just what I was looking for.