Hi,
So I have a cheap 'airless paint sprayer' that I bought. It wasn't really working with the batteries I was using but I figured this might be a power draw issue. The tool claims to be 500w, and run from a 21v battery. My understanding was that this is usually a regular 5s cell tool battery but using the fully charged cell voltage as the battery voltage (as opposed to the nominal voltage, which we use in the UK). However it was being very pathetic and not pumping paint. I figured maybe the Chinese batteries were more comfortable with a 25+ amp drain than typical 'western' brands, sacrificing their service life for raw power.
So... wanting to test this theory I wired up a DCDC converter capable of 20A (just to see if it worked better) to the tool battery terminals. A quick test showed this was working, the tool fired up and sounded like it had more grunt. I turned off the buck (it has an LCD control panel, so I pressed 'off') but when putting some water in the tool the buck got shifted and contacted a screwdriver and sent off some sparks. I unplugged everything, set stuff up more securely and tested... no response from the tool although the buck looked like it was working. I happened to have another identical buck so tried that, but still nothing from the tool.
So I fried something.
I took it apart to have a look. It looks like a speed controller wired from the battery and then the motor wired up from that and some mechanics for the rest of the tool.
My electronics knowledge is limited, but I checked the motor terminals with a multimeter and they all showed a short. I don't know BLDC motors at all so had no idea if this was normal, but I detached the wires to the controller and the short remained, all three of the motor terminals show a short to one another.
So I googled it and the answer that I thought I found was that this was not normal and indicated the windings were shorted to one another. I figured rewinding wouldn't be too tough and began to take it all apart.
However once I took the basic PCB off of the motor the coils were not shorted together... I checked the PCB and sure enough the coils are all shorted together by the circuit board... so I guess my Googling was incorrect?
Either that or I have something else totally wrong in what I have worked out.
Anyway - here is the motor:

And here is what I assume is a BLDC speed controller (potted):
