etard
100 kW
We are not trying to discourage you, on the contrary, we don't want you to blow through a controller get discouraged and quit the whole thing altogether. It's not a cheap hobby, but if you get a decent high end RC controller you might have a chance. You are also missing alot of periphery expenses that will come up during your build. You will still need to purchase a potentiometer based handlebar throttle, that charger is nice but you will need a power supply to plug into wall outlet, you will need a welder, sprockets, chains, adapters, freewheels, more adapters, soldering gun, capacitors, drill, drill bits, fasteners, wire, connectors... the rabbit hole will get deep, but if you start on the right path with a decent investment it will be worth it in the end. The SLA hub motor kits are as cheap as it gets, don't think you are going to beat that with an RC build unless it is friction drive, you are stressing the components near their limit as is (especially at 22 volts) and if you try to get that little controller to power your bike to 30 mph it is gonna pop when you are going 5 mph. Understand, it might do 30 mph on level ground sustained and might be happy, but it will heat up faster than you can let up on the throttle at the first log or root you encounter at 5 mph.
How and where will you mount the motor?
If you try inside the frame you might have pedal clearance issues, if you want big tire you might have chain clearance issues, if you want to mount it on the left freewheel you will have backpedal issues, if you try to do away with your pedals you might have motor startup issues, if you go with a hall sensored controller you might have controller mounting issues ( heh AJ :wink: ?).
Also your reduction math is a little off as Olaf described. I assume you are using a BMX rim which is 20" diameter with tire, so you will need that tire to spin at around 500 rpm at 30 mph. So you need roughly 5:1 reduction, but then your battery's voltage will sag a little under load to say 20 volts which with efficiency losses will probably require you to run a 4:1 reduction to reach 30 mph. I think a more realistic goal to start out would be a top speed of 10-15 mph, which will get you up hills so you can bomb down them with the assistance of gravity, and then when you can afford more batteries and better controller upgrade to 48 volt setup and you will already have the gearing and reduction work out for your desired 30 mph.
good luck!
How and where will you mount the motor?
If you try inside the frame you might have pedal clearance issues, if you want big tire you might have chain clearance issues, if you want to mount it on the left freewheel you will have backpedal issues, if you try to do away with your pedals you might have motor startup issues, if you go with a hall sensored controller you might have controller mounting issues ( heh AJ :wink: ?).
Also your reduction math is a little off as Olaf described. I assume you are using a BMX rim which is 20" diameter with tire, so you will need that tire to spin at around 500 rpm at 30 mph. So you need roughly 5:1 reduction, but then your battery's voltage will sag a little under load to say 20 volts which with efficiency losses will probably require you to run a 4:1 reduction to reach 30 mph. I think a more realistic goal to start out would be a top speed of 10-15 mph, which will get you up hills so you can bomb down them with the assistance of gravity, and then when you can afford more batteries and better controller upgrade to 48 volt setup and you will already have the gearing and reduction work out for your desired 30 mph.
good luck!