Originally posted by: thescreensavers
I got a quick question.
Lets say I get a 30amp Speed controller and my batteries are 36amps, the speed controller will only allow 30amps in? or will something wrong happen. I am not sure.
Thanks
I think you're confusing capacity with current. Are the batteries capable of deliver 12amps each? Or are they each rated at 12 Amp-hours?
Your math in your diagram is wrong. You let's say you have three batteries rated at 12volts, 12 amp-hours in series. 12v X 3 = 36 volts. But since you're in series, the array's capacity is the same as each cell individually. So you don't have 36 amp-hours, you still have 12 amp-hours.
Taking each battery individually: 12Volts @ 12Amp-hours = 144Watt-hours which is the amount of *energy* in *each* battery.
144Watt-hours * 3 batteries = 432 Watt-Hours.
36Volts @ 12 Amp-Hours = 432 Watt-hours. See? They match.
But NOT THIS: 36v @ 36Amp-hours = 1296 Watt-hours! = You just violated the laws of thermodynamics.
If you have a motor that's rated at 750watts and have 432 Watt-hours of energy, then how much run time will you have? 432/750=0.576 Hours under ideal conditions. If your batteries are lead acid batteries, your amp-hr rating is probably highly optimistic under high load conditions, so your runtime is going to suffer.
There are going to many problems you're going to have to solve with a go-kart. GOOD batteries (li-po, Li-FePo4) are going to cost more than everything else put together. Lead acid batts are cheap, but are heavy.
If you're looking at standard RC speed controllers (might be tough finding one to meet your needs) you can use a servo tester for a throtlle. RC ESCs just accept a standard RC servo pulstrain from RC receivers. Since you wont' have a receiver to generate the necessary pulse, a servo tester will do the job. Just remember that a servo tester needs power as well. Servo testers usually just have a knob connected to a potentiometer, and you can pretty easily remotely mount the pot. So that will take care of the "control architecture".