Help identifying a proper controller for motor

Junkmonk

New Member
Local time
3:51 PM
Joined
Sep 24, 2018
Messages
6
It’s from an old Kenmore stackable.

110v 50-60 hz 16000 rpm
 

Attachments

  • 81EDEB70-2C07-4313-813E-DAB15F4043BF.jpeg
    81EDEB70-2C07-4313-813E-DAB15F4043BF.jpeg
    136.5 KB · Views: 197
  • 246F4F63-1D57-4DD9-90D9-FA685420D00B.png
    246F4F63-1D57-4DD9-90D9-FA685420D00B.png
    480.2 KB · Views: 184
  • 40A05F7F-DA5F-4B59-A1FA-61E04915970C.png
    40A05F7F-DA5F-4B59-A1FA-61E04915970C.png
    461.4 KB · Views: 169
  • FFD85AAA-6625-4E9F-B30E-744BD80DECB0.jpeg
    FFD85AAA-6625-4E9F-B30E-744BD80DECB0.jpeg
    131.3 KB · Views: 176
Well it's an AC motor means you need a DC to AC inverter and a controller... 120 volt 11 amp means 1320 watts. Don't know if AC motors work well for ebikes. AC inverters are not efficient. So unless you have 120 volt battery pack and a 120 volt 11amp controller... Would have to maybe have a 48 volt battery system ran to a 48 volt 30amp controller to a 48 volt to 120 volt step up (inverter) maybe you hypothetically could make it work.
 
Back
Top