Jerome Daoust wrote:My bike web page.
Jerome Daoust wrote:My bike web page.






hi-powercycles wrote:I want to mention that I do have a Crystalyte 5304 to test...I am just waiting on the rim to lace it in. I will be doing a comparison video between the C-lyte 5304 and the 600W thunderbolt for anyone interested in seeing how a 25 lb behemoth stacks up against an 8.9lb welterweight champ. When both motors laced into rims hit the scales at the shop, the BMC came in under 11 lbs, while the C-lyte was 27 lbs! Wow.
hi-powercycles wrote:P.S. This motor and our extremely light weight batteries make it possible to offer a 35 MPH, high torque, 5" travel dual suspension (120mm travel front forks) Mountain bike that weighs in at UNDER 40 lbs ready to ride! If there is interest in something like this, we will definitely offer it in the near future! Have a great day everyone.

hi-powercycles wrote:I want to mention that I do have a Crystalyte 5304 to test...I am just waiting on the rim to lace it in. I will be doing a comparison video between the C-lyte 5304 and the 600W thunderbolt for anyone interested in seeing how a 25 lb behemoth stacks up against an 8.9lb welterweight champ. When both motors laced into rims hit the scales at the shop, the BMC came in under 11 lbs, while the C-lyte was 27 lbs! Wow.










recumbent wrote:In all fairness about the quality control of the BMC motor, it looks like the crimped wire was brazed at the end, making the connection near perfect, the magnet misalignment could very well be the beginning, & end, of the glueing-up process where they won't ever align perfectly.
However, the spindle being less than half a mm smaller than 10mm might look bad on a vernier caliper scale, does not amount to much compared to a stamped-out rear drop-out on a bike.
It's easily avoidable in the milling process however, and is the most telling of the poor QC than all the rest.

voicecoils wrote:with better materials, design, manufacturing capabilities, and tighter tolerance. This can be done in China IMO but a company would need to have strong control over everything

pwbset wrote:voicecoils wrote:with better materials, design, manufacturing capabilities, and tighter tolerance. This can be done in China IMO but a company would need to have strong control over everything
The way the world is going this could be doable in US/Aus/CA/UK etc. pretty soon for competitive price.![]()

voicecoils wrote:recumbent wrote:In all fairness about the quality control of the BMC motor, it looks like the crimped wire was brazed at the end, making the connection near perfect, the magnet misalignment could very well be the beginning, & end, of the glueing-up process where they won't ever align perfectly.
However, the spindle being less than half a mm smaller than 10mm might look bad on a vernier caliper scale, does not amount to much compared to a stamped-out rear drop-out on a bike.
It's easily avoidable in the milling process however, and is the most telling of the poor QC than all the rest.
I agree, those QC issues in total don't amount to much. My Bafang and X5 motor both do not have perfect axle flats along the length. ebike.ca says the Crystalyte axles are lathe turned.
From an electromagnetic point of view, I think the magnet alignment would have an unmeasurable affect in road riding conditions.
The stator coils look much neater on the BMC then the Bafang to me.
Bigger issue IMHO is that hubmotors could be stronger, lighter, and more powerful with better materials, design, manufacturing capabilities, and tighter tolerance. This can be done in China IMO but a company would need to have strong control over everything like Apple does in its iPod & computer products. Price would then naturally reflect this.

biohazardman wrote:...It's an expensive paperweight for now unless I decide to put forth the effort and purchase a steel framed bike and mod the dropout and a torque bar for the specific motor. Although it is not likely one of their best efforts it is my first BMC and compares not to my C-lyte or GM. Leaves a bad taste for the new stuff. Personally I think they should all be inspected inside and out before they are sold to the public. Nuff of a rant on this thing now time to put it aside. Somebody show me a nice new motor inside and out and tell me it is worthy to be had so I can be converted to the gear drive as I am not at the moment.

biohazardman wrote:Looks can be deceiving there is no solder nor has the terminal been brazed. Somebody show me a nice new motor inside and out and tell me it is worthy to be had so I can be converted to the gear drive as I am not at the moment.

recumbent wrote:biohazardman wrote:Looks can be deceiving there is no solder nor has the terminal been brazed. Somebody show me a nice new motor inside and out and tell me it is worthy to be had so I can be converted to the gear drive as I am not at the moment.
Oops, sorry man, i didn't know it was that bad. I thought maybe you could wrap some shim-stock around the axle and it would tighten the joint to an interference fit if you wanted. Just choose the correct thickness of shim stock.
You purchased this motor second hand, maybe there was a history behind this motor, like rejected stock or something.
Hope things work better than they look.

voicecoils wrote:biohazardman wrote:...It's an expensive paperweight for now unless I decide to put forth the effort and purchase a steel framed bike and mod the dropout and a torque bar for the specific motor. Although it is not likely one of their best efforts it is my first BMC and compares not to my C-lyte or GM. Leaves a bad taste for the new stuff. Personally I think they should all be inspected inside and out before they are sold to the public. Nuff of a rant on this thing now time to put it aside. Somebody show me a nice new motor inside and out and tell me it is worthy to be had so I can be converted to the gear drive as I am not at the moment.
Have you run the motor? I'd try to make the small mods you see necessary to increase it's reliability and then give it a go. Make a monster torque arm to satisfy those concerns.
What would you have been willing to pay for a quality motor? 10x the cost of yours?
I don't disagree with you that a quality motor should be out there, but I think you do get what you pay for. I don't know what you paid for yours but I suspect there was at least 10x mark up before it got to your door. If it was $500, then the first wholesaler bulk buyer or whoever got the motors straight from the factory probably paid $50, maybe way less. Then the middle man along the way took their cut. What kind of quality in manufacturing and materials can be had for $50 bucks?

Jerome Daoust wrote:I have a setup (Cadillac AM2.4 + new BMC 600 W + 20 Ah 51.2 V LiFePo4) on order and will write a review with my experience when I get it and start putting miles on the bike.


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