I bought a generic china 49cc motor kit a few years back and I'm just now getting around to getting it up and running. Till now I didn't have a bike to put it on without some serious mods to the frame so I put it off. Now I have a pretty big framed hard tail mountain bike that is just about perfect for my mounting solution (hose clamps) but I'm running into a problem with the rag mounted sprocket.
On both the 9 and 5 bolt sprockets the holes line up with two spokes crossing on one of the holes and I can't seem to find the correct orientation to mount it so it won't put unnecessary stress on my spokes. I've already got a taunt one just waiting to snap and I'm worried that installing the sprocket is going to cause that to happen sooner rather than later, though there is nothing I can do about it as that eventuality will come soon enough regardless.
My real question is how I'm going to solve this little problem because I've managed to bolt on the sprocket but I'm not using all the bolts. Instead of using all 9 I'm using 6 in groups of 2 in a triangular pattern with a space between each group.
Geometrically it should be strong enough not to slip at all and other than being a bit more delicate to true I've managed to get it secured without running into the issue of the spoke obstruction.
I'm wondering if this is good enough to run my motor with or if I'm just asking for problems down the road. As I have no experience with motors I don't know if the minimal anchoring is going to just chew threw my spokes the second it gets some torque from the motor or if it will eventually twist my wheel out of shape due to inadequate torque distribution a crossed all of the spokes.
Has anyone tried this? Douse anyone know what I'm doing wrong with the mounting?
I would post pictures but I don't have a camera the most I can do is post this graphic (quick and basic render of the setup in Maya, minus the spokes and wheel)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
On both the 9 and 5 bolt sprockets the holes line up with two spokes crossing on one of the holes and I can't seem to find the correct orientation to mount it so it won't put unnecessary stress on my spokes. I've already got a taunt one just waiting to snap and I'm worried that installing the sprocket is going to cause that to happen sooner rather than later, though there is nothing I can do about it as that eventuality will come soon enough regardless.
My real question is how I'm going to solve this little problem because I've managed to bolt on the sprocket but I'm not using all the bolts. Instead of using all 9 I'm using 6 in groups of 2 in a triangular pattern with a space between each group.
Geometrically it should be strong enough not to slip at all and other than being a bit more delicate to true I've managed to get it secured without running into the issue of the spoke obstruction.
I'm wondering if this is good enough to run my motor with or if I'm just asking for problems down the road. As I have no experience with motors I don't know if the minimal anchoring is going to just chew threw my spokes the second it gets some torque from the motor or if it will eventually twist my wheel out of shape due to inadequate torque distribution a crossed all of the spokes.
Has anyone tried this? Douse anyone know what I'm doing wrong with the mounting?
I would post pictures but I don't have a camera the most I can do is post this graphic (quick and basic render of the setup in Maya, minus the spokes and wheel)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us