I'm pretty sure that nobody wants it over with more than me. I'm all beastly, beasted out.I can't wait to see this bike complete. It's such a beast.
LiPo. It's not the size that matters, but the motion of the ocean. LOLYou need some bigger batteries for that bad boy. Lifepo?
That's pure frustration unleashed gorilla style. The 6 hole threads were already stripped out from trying to get the sprocket to bolt on true using the Top Hat Adapter. If I used nuts as spacers to keep the Adapter off the hub then the sprocket would spin true with no wobble. No other way worked.Ouch to that hub.... I know your finger will heal but that hub won't... Lol
If I would have had dynamite then I would have posted a pic of that hub in small smoldering pieces. LMAOI thought I was bad. Lmfao, you win.
The Top Hat adapter I got from Kings luckily fit my hub, just not hub + rotor + caliper. Have to run a C brake on the rear and disc up front.
What are you doing doing for a rear brake now? Since you butchered your hub.
No because I now know that I have to install a roller tensioner which is how I stripped the threads on the wheel in the pic. Putting the sprocket on and off and on again, over and over. The front wheel is now on the back and the sprocket is on and I have 7/8" of space between the disc and the sprocket. I installed the sprocket only once this time and left it that way.Won't you have the same problem if the wheels are identical?
My motorcycle tire is 4 1/8" wide and the space between the dropouts is 8". The whole bike is built on an industrial scale. LOLPfffft I wish I had that much clearance, tried a bigger rotor but it rubbed the frame and I didn't want a cut chainstay at 30 mph. I will end up using a C brake on the back, luckily I have a fender mount hole.
The motorcycle tires never lose air just sitting around like a bike tire does and the knobbies are much harder to suffer a flat that any street tire is because the knobs are solid chunks of rubber.What a cheater ! Lmfao
I can't wait to see this thing tearing it up