Finally started work on the third build of a three wheel board design.
I have been learning from this site for a while now, without posting much. The amazing custom builds and variations on this site helped to inspire the direction of this project.
I took some time to redesign the power system. The heavy hub motor is gone in exchange for an outrunner. (motor undecided, sensored 6374 from APS maybe. Or an 80110…
) It will power a generic rear pocket bike wheel.
The idea is to use as many off the shelf parts as possible. Mountain board trucks, pocket bike rear wheel assembly, and rc/APS based electrics. Batteries and controller will be mounted under the deck.
Instead of a lightweight longboard commuter that I can jump on between public transit to commute, I wanted something I could ride the whole way. All terrain, rip the streets, bike lanes/paths, parks, etc. More stable at sustained higher speeds... and an easy disc brake option.
Initially with the last board the plan was to make a ready to go, long range, simple hub-motor board that anyone could ride and charge safely(especially). I used an off the shelf golden motor mp3 kit with lifepo4 for simplicity. I actually only got to ride it for 2 days. It was built for someone interested in investing in the design.
I have started the mock up board with hardboard mdf, 5 layers at 1/8”. Cheaper and easier to shape. The final will be 9x 1/16” maple with a RockitLam veneer bottom sheet and 2 layers of carbon fiber on the top. I re-shaped the tail section of the mold to shave 3 ½” off the length of the last board.
I have mounted the trucks and I am thinking about stuffing an lcd volt meter in the nose.
There is still more shaping to do on the sidecut and the tail. Next though, is to fab up the rear wheel dropouts/hangers to mount to the deck. Then shape as necessary for chain tolerances etc…
I am going to try to log more of the process this time… Input is welcome.
Link to the last build: http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=12&t=53348
Don't mind the dirty wheel. I picked up a parts bike for $35 so I could compare wheels, dimensions ect... it has been cleaned up a bit since these shots






I have been learning from this site for a while now, without posting much. The amazing custom builds and variations on this site helped to inspire the direction of this project.
I took some time to redesign the power system. The heavy hub motor is gone in exchange for an outrunner. (motor undecided, sensored 6374 from APS maybe. Or an 80110…

The idea is to use as many off the shelf parts as possible. Mountain board trucks, pocket bike rear wheel assembly, and rc/APS based electrics. Batteries and controller will be mounted under the deck.
Instead of a lightweight longboard commuter that I can jump on between public transit to commute, I wanted something I could ride the whole way. All terrain, rip the streets, bike lanes/paths, parks, etc. More stable at sustained higher speeds... and an easy disc brake option.
Initially with the last board the plan was to make a ready to go, long range, simple hub-motor board that anyone could ride and charge safely(especially). I used an off the shelf golden motor mp3 kit with lifepo4 for simplicity. I actually only got to ride it for 2 days. It was built for someone interested in investing in the design.
I have started the mock up board with hardboard mdf, 5 layers at 1/8”. Cheaper and easier to shape. The final will be 9x 1/16” maple with a RockitLam veneer bottom sheet and 2 layers of carbon fiber on the top. I re-shaped the tail section of the mold to shave 3 ½” off the length of the last board.
I have mounted the trucks and I am thinking about stuffing an lcd volt meter in the nose.
There is still more shaping to do on the sidecut and the tail. Next though, is to fab up the rear wheel dropouts/hangers to mount to the deck. Then shape as necessary for chain tolerances etc…
I am going to try to log more of the process this time… Input is welcome.
Link to the last build: http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=12&t=53348
Don't mind the dirty wheel. I picked up a parts bike for $35 so I could compare wheels, dimensions ect... it has been cleaned up a bit since these shots





