There isnt any current limiting or protection on these controllers. You do need a fuse to protect them.
Yes it is a 30 amp fuse in the picture. With a heatsink the controller should take 27amps per channel continuous,but if you only stall one motor then a track on the pcb burns out and doesnt blow the fuse, Like when my robot got jammed under the arena flipper. I am now going to put a 25amp fuse in plus a backup 30amp fuse swicthed in with a servo just in case. I am running 30volt motors at 33.6v, normally the wheels spin all the time even when pushing other robots and pulls between 5 and 10 amps per motor but when stalled would easily pull 100+amps.
Graeme - little hitter 2.




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