dogman said:
Do you need 200 mile range everyday? or just occasionally. Build a reasonable car or motorcycle conversion that can do 50 miles at 50 mph, and rent something to go further, or build a generator trailer.
I need it an average of 4 times a month (2 round trips). That distance comprises 90-95% of the milage I do on my car. I should check the altutide change on that trip to find the average grade...
michaelplogue said:
For a 70mph cruising speed, of course a bicycle would not be a viable option. The 'smallest' you would want to go with would be a motorcycle conversion. But even then I think you'd have problems dealing with all the batteries that would be required to get that 200 mile distance. For these specs, I think you would be better served with a hybrid, such as the VentureOne (Carver).
You know, I might buy one of those, but that's a minimum of 1.5 years out. I'd rather start something in the next 1.5 months if I can. All electric would be prefered, but I understand energy density issues there. Is there a seat of the pants number for the efficiency difference between an ICE and a generator trailer?
TylerDurden said:
gast42 said:
Before I get too much further, do these numbers sound about right?
Before you consider a warp in the continuum, remember the newfangled invention: "the trailer".
Not sure what 100lb motor you are looking at... a perm weighs about 45lb, a 5kW 5304 = 25lb.
Add 120lbs for batts, since 80lbs is already factored for the bike.
50mph = $5000 in batts, $700 for motor/electrics, $800 for bike & trailer.
If getting wet from rain makes you squeemish, get a velo (and go faster or farther).
I can't reproduce the numbers on that chart, so help me with my math. We want watts. So:
1 Watt = 1 Newton * (Meter / Second)
We have pounds and miles per hour so:
1 pound = 4.45 Newtons
240 pounds = 1068 Newtons
1 mile per hour = 0.45 Meters / Second
50 mph = 22.5 Meters / Second
22.5 m/s * 1068 N = 24030 Watts
That's a factor of 10 difference. Where's my extra zero comming from? If I am wrong that would bring my budget down to 15kW which is much more reasonable (but still a lot). Wait. That the energy needed to go from 0-50, once you get up to speed relitivity kicks in, so the only extra energy I need is the energy to overcome friction (wind, road, and mechanical). I wonder if that factor of 10 is by chance, or if that can be used as a rough guide.
I wasn't looking at a given motor for the 100lb weight, just pulling a nice round number out of the air, but I was also thinking a BMS, speed sensor, etc. I chose the car body for simplicity for the most part. I still want more than a bicycle tire at 50+ mph. A 1" wheel just doesn't seem safe or reliable at those speeds, but then maybe that's just my perception.