tostino wrote:Just a little update... I took my motorcycle enforcement class this weekend, it took about 11 hours a day both Saturday and Sunday. I passed!
Congrat!
Now.. the ebike need your work!
tostino wrote:Just a little update... I took my motorcycle enforcement class this weekend, it took about 11 hours a day both Saturday and Sunday. I passed!















Biff wrote:Sat Feb 12, 2011tostino wrote:I actually have no idea how I would couple the motor to the transmission if I were to go that route. Have there been any other builds that have used the tranny? I've had a hard time finding that info, but then again, I'm browsing with my phone which isn't always the best for finding info lol.
Check this recent thread.
http://www.endless-sphere.com/forums/vi ... 10&t=25160tostino wrote:How large of a battery do you think I'll be able to fit on the bike? I was thinking about 36s 30ah or 40ah.
I saw in another thread on an electric dragster, Luke said to use some copper bussbars and solder thick male bullet connectors for all the packs in parallel, and use the bussbars for series connections too. I loved that idea, because it seemed so elegant, and allowed for any size pack. I was going to use 6s5ah packs and put 6 to 8 (or more if they will fit) in parallel, and 6 in series.
36S is pretty high voltage, Most of the 15-20kW motors are 72V systems and would break if you put them on 130V. I think I would go with 30S max. Or maybe 20S to start with, and then increase the voltage if you want more speed.
To begin with I would go with maybe 4 of these 4Ah 45C 10S packs, 2 parallel, 2 series
http://www.hobbyking.com/hobbyking/stor ... duct=14614
That would give you 74V 8Ah (592Wh), but more importantly the capability of drawing 8*45 = 360A (probably about 21kW) for less than $500 and only weight around 10 lbs. That would give you a really good performing bike, with very minimal battery expense, and it would be really easy to integrate into the chassis. Once you get familiar with the motor and all the electronics and the average power draw and the range you want, you could decide how much battery you want, and either add to the pack with the same cells to get the range you want, or design a large battery using cheaper cells. Those high discharge cells end up being about $0.87 / Wh (if their spec sheet is accurate) which isn't bad even if you are assembling a large pack, from my experience the cheapest lithium cells are around $0.5 / Wh, and I have paid as much as $3.25 / Wh, but I haven't looked at battery pricing very closely recently. Be careful when looking at prices / kWh on the internet, most companies lie about the actual capacity / capability of their cells. My bet is that by the time you are done experimenting and what not with a small high-discharge battery, there will be a better / cheaper battery solution available for your full range pack, and you will have a much better idea of what you want your pack to accomplish.
I am interested what do other people think of my suggestions?
-ryan

deVries wrote:I'm no expert, just an interested learner wanting to do a motorcycle build at much lower speeds, but your suggestions seem excellent & very knowledgeable.![]()
I'm not certain how fast motor tech is moving, but I'm curious what you would recommend today vs this post last year in February 2011?Thanks!
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Anything new with your build Tostino?


Biff wrote:It looks like Zero motorcycles is interested in selling their motors / controllers / batteries.
http://www.zeromotorcycles.com/powertrains/


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