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-   -   Mrs Fox marooned - EZ-Go became an EZ-Stop (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/all-about-golf-carts-things-156/mrs-fox-marooned-ez-go-became-ez-stop-360301/)

Arctic Fox 07-28-2025 09:52 AM

Mrs Fox marooned - EZ-Go became an EZ-Stop
 
While powering up the slope following a MMP tunnel the cart suddenly lost all motive power.

Everything else continued to work - lights, horn etc. (I have tested all of the batteries and they are around 6.3v each, and the acid float test has all but one ball floating for each cell) so I suspect it is something to do with the electric motor itself or that part of the circuit.

Any quick things I should check before calling in the experts?

Thank you

In case you're wondering - and there's not a lot else to do on a hot day like this - my trusty ParCar came to the rescue and towed her cart home.

Altavia 07-28-2025 11:04 AM

If not already - I'd look for a loose connection first.

Clean battery terminals second.

Check battery voltage under load third.

villagetinker 07-28-2025 11:38 AM

After doing the above, check brushes if this is a DC motor, otherwise, I would jack up the rear wheels and try pressing the accelerator, if the wheels do not move, you probably have a fault in the motor control module. Hope this is not like a club cart I helped fix, the replacement controller was $1000.

Aces4 07-28-2025 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arctic Fox (Post 2449141)
While powering up the slope following a MMP tunnel the cart suddenly lost all motive power.

Everything else continued to work - lights, horn etc. (I have tested all of the batteries and they are around 6.3v each, and the acid float test has all but one ball floating for each cell) so I suspect it is something to do with the electric motor itself or that part of the circuit.

Any quick things I should check before calling in the experts?

Thank you

In case you're wondering - and there's not a lot else to do on a hot day like this - my trusty ParCar came to the rescue and towed her cart home.

And thank God for cellphones in this heat!

Rango 07-28-2025 01:47 PM

A 6 volt battery at 6.3 volts is about 80%

It’s the voltage under a load that’s important

Arctic Fox 07-28-2025 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rango (Post 2449212)
A 6 volt battery at 6.3 volts is about 80%

It’s the voltage under a load that’s important

Thank you.

How big a load does it have to be - only things like the horn and lights are operating?

I don't understand the "80%" part - grateful if you would explain

Topspinmo 07-28-2025 09:10 PM

Didn’t mention how old cart? I think the 80% means 80% charged? Which should be enough to move cart if amps load of 80% reaching electric motor? You can volts but little amps if cells are bad?

Probably going to have to do load test on each battery to determine if it’s battery problem or wiring switch/relay bad part problem (I’m not familiar with connected batteries enough to know it you do load test while batteries are all connected? ]The lights and horn don’t pull enough amps like electric motor does to move the cart. Most Likely you will have call service tech that comes to home to troubleshoot your problems. It could be simple or complexed?

Southwest737 07-29-2025 05:05 AM

Check out the solenoid. It is a common failure point in electric carts.

lawgolfer 07-29-2025 07:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arctic Fox (Post 2449141)
While powering up the slope following a MMP tunnel the cart suddenly lost all motive power.

Everything else continued to work - lights, horn etc. (I have tested all of the batteries and they are around 6.3v each, and the acid float test has all but one ball floating for each cell) so I suspect it is something to do with the electric motor itself or that part of the circuit.

Any quick things I should check before calling in the experts?

Thank you

In case you're wondering - and there's not a lot else to do on a hot day like this - my trusty ParCar came to the rescue and towed her cart home.

Both electric and gas EZGO carts share a "stop switch" that is under the accelerator pedal. This is a simple switch which is spring-loaded. When the driver is not pushing down on the accelerator pedal, the spring-loaded switch is in the "off" position and the cart will not run. When the driver pushes down on the pedal he closes the switch, and the cart then runs.

The switch can stick. If it does, all other electric functions (lights, horn, etc) will work, but the cart will not move. EZGO has used two different versions of this switch over the years. Both are available from Amazon for around $20. When you've checked all the usual suspects (loose connections, fuses, etc) and are still scratching your head, check out this switch.

Every make and model of golf carts, both gas and electric, has some version of this switch. My trusty Yamaha golf cart failed under exactly the same circumstances as did your wife's electric EZGO. I was exiting a tunnel, lifted my foot from the accelerator pedal in preparation to make the turn, and the cart died. After 10+ carts had backed up behind me in the tunnel, the switch finally unstuck and I was able to drive home where I spent the next hour pondering over the cause of such an unusual failure.

dewilson58 07-29-2025 07:32 AM

Jus saw another EZ-not go dead on the side of Pinellas Road.

:22yikes:

NoMo50 07-29-2025 08:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by villagetinker (Post 2449175)
After doing the above, check brushes if this is a DC motor, otherwise, I would jack up the rear wheels and try pressing the accelerator, if the wheels do not move, you probably have a fault in the motor control module. Hope this is not like a club cart I helped fix, the replacement controller was $1000.

Say it ain't so. I thought electric carts were supposed to be cheap to maintain. (Tongue firmly in cheek).

Rocksnap 07-29-2025 10:49 AM

This is not going to help you in your crisis here. But a PSA.
There’s a reason I bought a gas cart. Tried and true. EV are hard to troubleshoot. Batteries don’t like heat. Even LiPo batteries. And now you store them in a hot garage. I’m hearing of LiPo batteries failing in 2 years. Good luck with the fix.

jimjamuser 07-29-2025 11:45 AM

EVs have about one fourth the number of parts as a gas engine golf cart. So, theoretically the Electric golf cart should be easier to troubleshoot. Owners and repair people just have more experience with gas golf carts. That will change as more people buy Electric golf carts

Arctic Fox 07-29-2025 12:14 PM

Thank you all for your helpful suggestions

This morning I used my limited electrical expertise to isolate the batteries one by one, trying the accelerator each time I had five different batteries in the circuit.

The battery that is at the start (or end?) of the wiring and has numerous leads attached (I'm guessing lights, horn and anything else that doesn't need 36v) is the one causing the problem, and excluding that got the cart moving again.

Last time this happened I just replaced the one battery with a similarly-aged one so am hoping to do that again. Mrs Fox, however, has her eyes on a whole new set (outrageous!) Of course, that would be the sensible option, but where's the fun in that?

jimjamuser 07-29-2025 02:06 PM

Congratulations. You not only troubleshot and solved your problem, but you disproved the idea that Electric golf carts were harder to troubleshoot than those CO2 and methane producers that require a trip to the gas station periodically.


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