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Installation & Connector Pinout

Wiring, connector pinouts, safety guidelines, and EMC compliance for ASI BAC motor controllers

Levy Fleets Team12 de enero de 202512 min read

Installation & Connector Pinout

This guide covers the physical installation, wiring, and safety requirements for ASI BAC motor controllers.

Low Power 24-Pin Connector

The primary connector for BAC355/555/855 controllers includes these signal assignments:

Hall Sensors (Pins 1-6)

PinFunctionSpecification
1-3Hall A, B, C5V Pulled-up, active low
4-6Hall GroundWithstand Voltage: 100V

Power Outputs

PinFunctionSpecification
115V SupplyPolyfuse protected, 50mA max
1312V SupplyPolyfuse protected, 50mA max
21-22Battery EnableUp to 400mA current

Communication Pins

PinFunctionNotes
17-18TTL SerialDirect serial communication
19-20CAN BusConfigurable 120Ω termination

Input/Output Functions

  • Cruise control input
  • Brake inputs (Brake 1, Brake 2)
  • Throttle (0-5V analog)
  • Switchable lighting output

High-Power Connectors

6-Pin Molex MX150

  • Hall sensor interface
  • Brake input support

16-Pin Molex MX150

FunctionSpecification
HDQ low-side switchFor BMS communication
Dual TTL channelsSerial communication
Analog inputs0-5V range
CAN communicationWith termination option
Ground400mA max shared

Motor Connector

Phase wiring follows U/V/W (or A/B/C) convention:

ConnectionNotes
Phase U (A)Motor phase 1
Phase V (B)Motor phase 2
Phase W (C)Motor phase 3
Hall signalsDedicated sensor wiring
Brake inputConfigurable 5V pull-up

Wire Gauge

Wire gauge varies by controller model. Always verify ampacity requirements for your specific application and use appropriately rated cables.

EMC/EMI Compliance

Responsibility

Final responsibility for passing EMC/EMI compliance tests lies with the integrator. Performance depends on:

  • Motor controller design
  • Wiring and grounding
  • Enclosure design
  • Component selection

Standards Priority

When guidance conflicts, prioritize in this order:

  1. Industry Regulations (ISO, UL, CE, EN)
  2. Industry Standards (IEEE, ANSI)
  3. Application-Specific Guidelines
  4. General Engineering Judgment

Wiring Best Practices

Power Wiring

1

Size Cables Appropriately

Use cables rated for your maximum continuous current to minimize resistance and heat generation.

2

Minimize Wire Length

Keep wires short to reduce inductance and voltage spikes during switching.

3

Twist Battery Leads

Twist B+ and B- leads tightly together to reduce electromagnetic radiation.

4

Twist Motor Phase Wires

Twist U, V, W motor wires together to minimize magnetic field radiation.

5

Route Within Frame

Position wiring within the vehicle frame, preferably low and central.

6

Apply Ferrite Beads

Add ferrite beads to noisy or unshielded wires where EMI is a concern.

Signal Wiring

PracticeApplication
Use twisted pairCAN-H/CAN-L differential signals
Twist with groundSingle-ended signals
Maintain separationKeep power and signal wires apart
Cross at 90°When power/signal must cross
Shield signal wiresConnect shield at controller end only
Terminate unused inputsPrevent floating states

Grounding Strategy

  • Keep power ground (B-) and signal ground (GND) separate outside the controller
  • Use galvanic isolation (opto-isolators) for noise-susceptible lines
  • Bond chassis to B- using a Y-class safety capacitor
  • Ensure shields and enclosures form electrically continuous systems

Protection & Fusing

Fuse Selection

Fuse TypeApplication
Blade fusesAutomotive, medium-current
Resettable PTCsLow to mid-power, reusable
Fast-blowSensitive electronics
Slow-blowMotor startup surge tolerance

Critical: Ampere Interrupting Capacity (AIC)

The fuse's AIC must exceed the maximum potential fault current from your battery system.

Safety Warning

Inadequate AIC ratings risk fuse explosion or failure to clear faults safely. Always verify your fuse can interrupt the maximum available fault current.

Rating Guidelines

  • Voltage rating: Must equal or exceed system voltage
  • Current rating: 125-150% of maximum continuous current (verify against application specs)

Fuse Placement

  • Primary fuse connects between battery positive terminal and controller input
  • Do not fuse individual motor phases - partial operation can cause severe damage

Reverse Polarity Protection

ASI controllers support regenerative braking, meaning current must flow bidirectionally between controller and battery.

No Series Diodes

Simple series diodes are unsuitable as they block regenerative current, potentially causing overvoltage faults.

  1. Ideal diode bridges using N-Channel MOSFETs
  2. Contactors with polarity detection

Capacitor Inrush Protection

Uses a power resistor and contactor:

  1. Initial power flows through resistor, limiting inrush
  2. Capacitors charge gradually
  3. Main contactor bypasses resistor for normal operation

Method 2: NTC Thermistor

  • High initial resistance decreases with heat
  • Pair with bypass relay for higher-power systems
  • Risk of overheating without bypass

Method 3: Soft-Start Circuit

Gradually ramps current using resistors, capacitors, and MOSFETs.

Battery Disconnection Warning

Critical Safety

Disconnecting the battery while the motor is actively regenerating can cause extremely high voltage spikes that may damage components.

Protection Methods

  • Add bulk capacitors for temporary power during disconnection
  • Implement undervoltage fault detection for graceful shutdown
  • Use inrush limiting during reconnection

Software Protections

The controller protects against:

  • Output instantaneous overcurrents
  • Temperature-based power limiting
  • Motor power and current limits
  • Battery current and temperature constraints
  • Motor temperature or I²T-based overload

Testing Requirements

Pre-Power Verification

  • Verify polarity of all connections
  • Confirm fuse installation
  • Check for short circuits

Initial Startup

  • Use current-limited bench supply
  • Monitor inrush behavior
  • Check temperature and voltage rails

Fault Simulation

Test the following scenarios:

  • Short circuits
  • Overcurrent conditions
  • Thermal events
  • Battery disconnection/reconnection
  • OVP and UVLO trigger points

Safety Responsibility

Safety is the sole responsibility of the system integrator. Compliance with ISO, IEC standards, formal risk assessment (FMEA), and comprehensive validation testing is recommended for each application.

Next Steps