wow are you gonna need some batteries!
Looks like the motor that LFP was using in his racing eMotorcycle?Coming soon to my next e-bike. LOL
Looks like the motor that LFP was using in his racing eMotorcycle?
Not a good way to advertise lol.
Looks like the motor that LFP was using in his racing eMotorcycle?
Not quite,
Lfp has had a few motors, the original was a custom golden motor (the magic pie folks). He burnned it up.....i have it on the bench here in Mi for a re-wind.
It was a prototype for zero motorcycles & started as one of these:
http://www.goldenmotor.ca/products/48-Volt-10KW-BLDC-Motor.html
LFP is the battery guru at zero fyi
He has other un-ubtainium from their parts bins.
Was running it on 116volts & a huge sevcon controller
That motenergy motor is nice...total overkill for a bicycle but a great motor all the same.
You have a controller picked out yet miked826?
+1 for the kelly.
($evcon'$ co$t)
Go big or go home (on the race track anyway)
I tend to stay below 72v on anything I call a everyday riding bike.
After that, the 50cc china girl is about a perfect bike motor![]()
You're asking too much, coming from an engineer who built an electric motard. It is possible, very easily in fact, if you have concentrated cash lying around. With gears you can do 55 mph with 4 hp or 3000W and not need tons of batteries. At 6000W my motard has enough torque to do a throttle induced backflip, I'm sure if there was a transmission out there that actually handled the torque, it could be stretched out to about 60 mph. Finding a multi speed drivetrain that can handle that torque will be difficult, since its more than would typically go through a small sequential gearstack. I think on an electric, doing more with less and just trying to keep it on the bicycle side of things with lightness and efficiency nets more results than going brutal, which is expensive and gets heavy, even with lithium batts if you want the best of both worlds. There is a reason that a Zero motorcycle costs $10,000, its difficult to get everything you want with an electric vehicle in one package without paying for the newest stuff. Never mind the expense of components and wiring for a system over 48v, where any bad connection turns into an arc welder, lol!
I'd like to motorize my mountain bike with a light electric setup, you can get good range with the standard setups up to 48v without breaking the bank.
Any geared hub has its weaknesses, I've heard of Nuvinci's failing from HT's so I don't think an electric motor would be kind to it. I'd stick with 3 speed hubs so you can swap them out cheaply when they fail if you do a mid drive. Rohloff is supposed to be wonderful if you have $1500 for a hub lying around. I think the Sturmey fixie hub is worth looking into, since it doesn't have pawls, which are the biggest weakness other than the risk of the driver which holds the sprocket fracturing. Mind you, this is high quality heat treated carbon steel with a perfect surface finish, they are like a mini Hewland gearbox inside, and still a trashy Unite Razor scooter motor can mash a regular Sturmey with a thwap of throttle.