. Mine doesn't have electromagnetic brakes so I'll need to disable that.
Burgerman wrote:Exitement?
...
WoodyGB made me a connector that worked on the nVSI of my Vienna.
I thought the Q50R had a VSI?
Burgerman wrote:I am baffled by that.
What are you asking or saying?
Burgerman wrote:Really?
shirley_hkg wrote:. Mine doesn't have electromagnetic brakes so I'll need to disable that.
Some ignorant grannies here bought themselves those cheap, light weight foldable wheelchairs, on Aliexpress. Chairs have no mechanical brakes, but use electromagnetic force to hold chair stationary. Shut it down and it is in free wheel.
Tested to shut it off on an incline , and it just rolled down slope and gain speed instantly. The AP barely saved himself out.
Power could be cutoff by accident or error of the system. What on earth one would ride a chair that would get himself killed.![]()
Burgerman wrote:So you are saying that when the bms kicks in and chops the battery off for any one of a dozen reasons, you can go down a slope onto a road (under a truck?) or off a keyside, under a train? How marvelous! That cant be legal can it?
Burgerman wrote:Does this apply to the sunrise Q50 chinese made chair?
Just checked. It uses VSI (nVSI just refers to new vsi) so is programable and has normal DC motors and electromagnetic brakes, same as other chairs. No runaways... They are a bit weedy, and all in one, no power module so have to be.
The Chinese Q50R is twice the price of the standard Q50R
Burgerman wrote:Does this apply to the sunrise Q50 chinese made chair?
Just checked. It uses VSI (nVSI just refers to new vsi) so is programable and has normal DC motors and electromagnetic brakes, same as other chairs. No runaways... They are a bit weedy, and all in one, no power module so have to be.
LROBBINS wrote:I notice that this one uses manual brakes as on a push chair for holding on a slope.

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