Best motor for steep city hill low speed climbing?

naitsirk

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Apr 8, 2014
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San Francisco, CA
I live in San Francisco and I'd like to bring my 5yo daughter to school on my my bike. Her school is up one of the steepest streets in the western world
(31% http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/22nd_Street_(San_Francisco)). I can get there by going up a series of 15-19% hills instead.
We are 300 lbs together with the bike. I can get up there, but it is a sweat at about 3mph, and its no fun. I'd like to be able to wear work clothes and assist but not, ideally, break a sweat. I would not use the motor otherwise, generally, and I don't need speed. Getting up the hill at 5mph is fine. I just don't want to burn out the motor doing it, so ideally the motor would be built for this purpose. A torque-y low speed motor that lets you freewheel would be swell.

I am pretty sure I need a rear wheel and will put the battery in a front carrier or front bottle rack (my four year old will ride on the back).
I will probably use an old 1993 cromoly mtn bike I have.

I have been looking at EM3ev: http://em3ev.com/store/index.php?route=product/product&path=36&product_id=138
and Amped: http://www.ampedbikes.com/kits.html

The EM3ev kit is 36v, 12T, 200 RPM 500W motor. I did not see specs for the Amped motor.

Anyone solved a similar challenge? Are these the right sort of things? What else should I consider?
 
For that load, you need two of the 12t motor. Or two slow dd motors. EM3ev doesn't seem to stock the 2810 anymore though. To haul all that weight up a hill is real work, like mechanical physics class stuff. No getting by on momentum up that hill. So it's not going to happen on 1000w. It's just not the same, when you need to haul cargo up steep hills. Just pedal hard works for 150 pounds of rider, but you and the kid will be very heavy.

The other thing that would work fine, is a low speed 5000 series crystalyte, if you can find one used. 5305, or better still 5306.


Bottom line, you are looking for a low speed winding, so 10 mph loaded up climbing the hill doesn't make 2000w straight into heat.

But better still, would be a non hub. For example, chain drive fixed gear motor on the left side of the wheel could be geared low enough for a 1000w motor to slowly grind you up the hill. And then on the flat, have a top speed of about 8 mph . :roll:

Another interesting idea, a Mac 12t on the rear wheel, then a bafang kit on the chain. On the steepest hills, engage both motors taking some of the load off the mac.
 
In case that wasn't so clear, I was saying two motors, like one on the front wheel and one on the back wheel if it's hubmotors.

Two normal stock motors will get a normal load up very steep hills simply because lifting 150 pounds up the hill is less work than 250. With say 3000w of power on normal motors, you can get moving faster than 15 mph up steep hills, and not lug the motor making it melt.

There are big motors, but they are wound for going 40 mph. What you need is a big motor wound for 20mph. I don't know of any like that on the market, but it might be possible to get one somehow.

So the idea is instead of one big motor that is too fast, get two slow motors, which are available, like the Mac 12t.
 
I'd say just about the only way to get up those hills is with a mid drive going through the chain on the lowest gear, so GNG or the new Bafang 750W mid drive. Hub motors will just get super hot with that load on those hills.

As for wanting one that will freewheel- well let's just say that once you've experienced the electric assist you probably won't be too inclined to put that much pedal effort in any more. :wink:
 
Have you actually hauled 250 pounds up 31% with one Ht3525? I don't doubt it will do it for a short time. The extra weight is what concerns me.

I can't say it won't work because I have not had a Ht3525.

Two of that motor is a really good idea though. That's clytes lower speed motor.
 
go the 12T upgaded with a small wheel

No consideration so far for the small wheel option so far.

careful consideration of both controller and battery to avoid smoking any of the three.

i like taking the long way these days smaller hills might save you a big chunk of coin for now
 
Welcome to ES,

I also live in a very hilly area and do a fair bit of riding up in our local mtns. I can tell you from experience that the cromotor can do it w/o breaking a sweat but that motor is WAY more than you need for what you want to accomplish.

I too like the mac motors, though i have only ridden a 8t, but that was quite good so a 12t should be very nice in that situation. And if you were to lace it in a 20 or 24" wheel it would have very impressive hill climbing ability.

I have also ridden the new bafang 250w mid-drive and was quite impressed with the 250w version so the 750w would probably be right up your alley (or the gng). Couple that with a mega range rear cassette or freewheel and that is likely to be your best solution for weight and versatility, imho.

Oh, and I have both amped bikes dd and geared motors and am quite happy with them but neither are going to accomplish what you want.

Good Luck
 
As the fact you can do it at 3mph is my only bench mark, how many watts are you? Some searching will tell you how much power various levels of cyclist achieve, so then you will know how powerful you are... roughly.

Now you know how much power a mid drive needs if it is to replace you as the pedal pusher.

Now you can look at the gearing advantage the mid drive offers, and calculate how much power the less advantaged hub motor will need.

I have no doubt in my mind that the steepest hill in the western world needs the best climber, and that will be a mid mount unless using a monster of a hub motor and accompanying battery/electronics.


I reckon a 750w mid will be double your own efforts. Taking you too around 6mph, and you can still add 3mph more. This might sound better based on your speeds taking the longer route.
 
let's chime in...
I also live in a hilly area where some private driveways have grades of 30%
I normally ride on grades of 15%.
Over the years I've built:
-bikes with (500W to 1000W) motors geared for 6mph (didn't work on grades over 15% without maximum assist from me)
-bikes with small motored 16" wheels (same as above)
... and the only thing that actually works above 15% grades. Bikes (trikes, actually) with two motors.
I have two incantations:
1- Front 24" wheel with an Amped geared hub (36V) or Magic Pie (60V) powering it. Rear wheel powered with a mid-drive 'thru the gears' bafang 250W motor on 36V
2- Front 16" wheel with an Amped geared hub running 60V. Rear powered by a (supposedly 1000W unknown) motor geared for 12mph @24V -I tested the current to this (unknown) motor climbing a 15% grade where it drew 700W and I'm fairly sure the controller is limited to 800W
(BTW I determined the Amped geared motors I have are a mid-speed wind of about 270kV- I own 4 of them)
Both trikes manage the 30% grades without melting down or assist from me.

You can run two motors off one battery but The C-discharge rating has to be (much) greater than 30. This pretty much means your choice of battery is limited to R/C LiCo with no BMS (unless you can find a BMS that handles more than 40A... 60A would be better to avoid overheating the BMS output devices)
I use two batteries sans BMS to avoid over-stressing one battery.
 
dogman said:
In case that wasn't so clear, I was saying two motors, like one on the front wheel and one on the back wheel if it's hubmotors.

So the idea is instead of one big motor that is too fast, get two slow motors, which are available, like the Mac 12t.
Here is a 2WD estimate using 2 MAC 12T motors on 50v (estimator is experimental and not fully tested, so... :D)

MAC12T-2WD.png
You can see the gross power is ~3600W and each motor will be dumping close to 400W as heat - in the 'overheat in a few minutes' range.

The overheating situation improves with backing off the throttle, but the total current will remain over 60A even if you throttle back down to 8mph or so. As ddk points out, this is problematic for a single BMS - I run 2WD and also use no BMS. On the other hand, if you go the 'long way' (which may not be so bad with power assist) this will zip up a 20% incline at 14+mph and no danger at all of overheating - but the current draw will still be 55A - again you can throttle back (or use a CA) to limit the current, but your net battery draw is still over the typical 40A BMS.

So - this looks doable with MAC 12Ts - it will pull like a mule - but you are going to need to look at you battery/BMS situation carefully.

nicobie said:
You need to get in touch with Ilia. He also lives in SF and has been selling ebike parts for years. I don't have his contact info, but he is a member here.
Ilia owns ebikessf.com - I got my motors and wheel builds from him - great guy, excellent support and service. He should have a BMC V2T (MAC 12T equivalent) that you can test drive...
 
ddk said:
let's chime in...
I also live in a hilly area where some private driveways have grades of 30%
I normally ride on grades of 15%.
Over the years I've built:
-bikes with (500W to 1000W) motors geared for 6mph (didn't work on grades over 15% without maximum assist from me)
-bikes with small motored 16" wheels (same as above)
... and the only thing that actually works above 15% grades. Bikes (trikes, actually) with two motors.
I have two incantations:
1- Front 24" wheel with an Amped geared hub (36V) or Magic Pie (60V) powering it. Rear wheel powered with a mid-drive 'thru the gears' bafang 250W motor on 36V
2- Front 16" wheel with an Amped geared hub running 60V. Rear powered by a (supposedly 1000W unknown) motor geared for 12mph @24V -I tested the current to this (unknown) motor climbing a 15% grade where it drew 700W and I'm fairly sure the controller is limited to 800W
(BTW I determined the Amped geared motors I have are a mid-speed wind of about 270kV- I own 4 of them)
Both trikes manage the 30% grades without melting down or assist from me.

You can run two motors off one battery but The C-discharge rating has to be (much) greater than 30. This pretty much means your choice of battery is limited to R/C LiCo with no BMS (unless you can find a BMS that handles more than 40A... 60A would be better to avoid overheating the BMS output devices)
I use two batteries sans BMS to avoid over-stressing one battery.

Good to hear from someone experienced.
Would a 750w mid not trump a 250w mid with hub motor assistance. I can't see use keeping above 15mph or even reaching that speed with toddlers on-board.

When you say 500W to 1000W motors geared for 6mph, do you mean mid drives? As your talking 15% and this chap is getting up 30% at 3mph unassisted. He sounds like a super hero. I'm going to go and look at his hill. Not take long to nip upstairs and stand on the bed.
 
friendly1uk said:
...
Would a 750w mid not trump a 250w mid with hub motor assistance. I can't see use keeping above 15mph or even reaching that speed with toddlers on-board.

When you say 500W to 1000W motors geared for 6mph, do you mean mid drives? As your talking 15% and this chap is getting up 30% at 3mph unassisted. He sounds like a super hero. I'm going to go and look at his hill. Not take long to nip upstairs and stand on the bed.
question 1: answer=of course it would. The Bafang uses a first stage 1:2 gear reduction before driving the input of a NuVinci 191B transmission (150% range geared for a top speed of 30mph with a cadence of 80rpm in it's highest gearing) and is driven by a 23A controller, which is why it works for my situation.
I've toyed with the idea of buying a 750W BB drive and building Yet Another Trike, but alas I lack real motivation to do so, since both my trikes already do a fine job of transporting me.
There's also that two-speed motor I'd like to try... but I refuse to source stuff directly from China

question 2: answer= these motors drove a single-speed freewheeled gear reduction stage (non-multiple geared) to achieve their design goals of 8mph unloaded. I only use these motors when needed i.e climbing stiff grades*. They are United brushed motors. I still have the 500W(450W) motor but I've sold off the 1000W version and it's controller.

*This is true of all my two-motored designs. I only power the rear motor(s) when needed, preferring to use front hub motors for flat(ish) and downhill travel.
note- where I live there is only various grades of up or down. The only flat area is a 1km run next to the local beach... I have to traverse 1%-15% grades to get there and return... because I live 90 meters above the ocean since I breath air because I'm human (sometimes)
 
Wow - thanks everyone. This is serious gear. Lots to chew on.
Funny, originally the HIlltopper guys were telling me their 250w front hub gear might do the trick, my research showed and your comments confirm that it is far from it.

I was about to write that I was starting to look at mid-drive - which makes me think I should look at what it would cost to buy a bike already kitted out with a mid-drive as opposed to fitting my old MTN bike. Smaller wheels sound good as well - I assume you have to make sure the cranks still have plenty of clearance, if converting, etc. I really appreciate these thoughts as most ebike kits seem to be geared toward speed as opposed to climbing at 5mph for 2 blocks. I like the idea of double Mac 12Ts.

I neglected to say, this whole trip is 1.5 miles up hill, with a few 17% hills that are a block or so. Then it is 1.5 miles downhill to work and 1.5 miles mild uphill (5-7%) back home. So a mid-drive might allow me to have a smaller battery for the whole trip because of efficiency.

Thanks also for the SF reference, that is super helpful.

K
 
The distance makes a huge difference. Those are short hills, so if you're willing to push on the pedals to help the motor up the really steep sections, almost any hubmotor kit will make your ride easier because you'll be less tired from grinding up the steady climb. I'd guess you'd be fine with a single Mac 12t rear. So much easier to set up, and only needs a normal battery. You find you want more, you can add it later.
 
Those hilltopper guys just want to sell you their product.

Contacting Illia is a great idea.

The proven san Francisco hill killer is a stokemonkey powered chain drive bike. Then you have 1000w or more driving the chain in a low gear.

I'm not sure if they are available again. Check with Grin Cyclery about that.

Somebody mentioned a smaller wheel, Yes, a 20" wheel is a big advantage for climbing hills. It means a motor that would smoke at 10 mph in a 26" rim might be fine at 10 mph in a 20" rim.

So the other thing to look into at Grin, is a whole new bike. The Edgerunner.

Bingo, a quick look reveals they now offer the edgerunner in a stokemonkey drive. I can't think of anything better suited to your needs. http://www.ebikes.ca/shop/edgerunner/edgerun-sm.html

Pricey yes, but it's the top of the cargo hauling pyramid IMO. Justin is always pushing quality and capability forward. Worth the price if you can afford it.

If you already have a longtail, then just the motor kit here. http://www.ebikes.ca/shop/conversion-kits/classic-stokemonkey-kit.html

Even with this, at 300 pounds you might be better off taking the less steep route. But it will go easy with a stokemonkey.
 
I was just looking in the for sale used section, and there is a guy selling a crystalyte 5305.

There is a hubmotor that can climb the 15% grades with ease, and even do it with 300 pounds aboard. They don't make these motors anymore.

The seller lives in the SF area I think!
 
I have a BMC/MAC and a 3525 from ilia. He is a great resource for us in San Francisco particularly.

The 3525 is a far more capable hill climber. Perhaps this is because our steep hills are brief, and heat buildup ends soon. I don't pull 300lbs.

You'll need a battery which is capable too, and I don't know if this is feasible without LiPo.

Consider walking the bike for the steepest blocks. It's way easier than running twin motors.

It sounds like you have experience riding with your kids, but the motor will add energy to your ride, and I cringe when I see people riding with their kids. It's not very safe here.

Best wishes!
 
That's one nice thing about the stokemonkey solution, He could just keep it in a 10 mph gear if he wants to.

If run on only 36v, the 5304 would be very slow too.
 
A spec refresher:
naitsirk said:
...I'd like to bring my 5yo daughter to school on my my bike. Her school is up one of the steepest streets in the western world
(31% ). I can get there by going up a series of 15-19% hills instead.
... We are 300 lbs together with the bike.
...I can get up there, but it is a sweat at about 3mph, and its no fun. I'd like to be able to wear work clothes and assist but not, ideally, break a sweat.
naitsirk said:
I neglected to say, this whole trip is 1.5 miles up hill, with a few 17% hills that are a block or so. Then it is 1.5 miles downhill to work and 1.5 miles mild uphill (5-7%) back home. So a mid-drive might allow me to have a smaller battery for the whole trip because of efficiency.
The business of possibly buying a new bike is sort of a major change - as are the short distances....

Since you are talking about toting a kid around, I'm wondering about what you plans will be in a year or two... It frankly looks like a cargo bike or mid-tail is you best bet if you are going to be trucking around a kid-sized passenger - which could be an important factor up front.

This plot may help you evaluate the suggested solutions - it shows the power needed to propel the bike up differing grades. You claim a present bike weight of 300lbs so I jacked it up to 330 to account for the electrification - this is probably a little shy but it's in the neighborhood.


It's important to realize that this is the power needed to move the bike - not the actual battery power you much expend to do so - which relies largely on motor efficiency. It has nothing to do specifically with electric power. For instance, you claim to be able to climb the 30% hill at ~3mph - the red plot shows you were putting out a bit less than 600W (300 vs 330lb vehicle) - which would definitely leave you dripping wet.

You mention a lower acceptable limit of 5mph and not working up a sweat as the target. From the plot we see that needs about 1000W - we might estimate you are only contributing 100-150W to stay dry, so we have a power shortfall of about 900W. This then is the magic number, so the Big Question becomes:

  • "How to best get 900W-1000W to the road (after we throw away power on motor efficiency)?".
This is where the high load and resulting low speed comes in...

  • At these speeds a DD hub motor will have efficiencies in the 25% range. Suggestions to use a big DD that is basically built to do 40mph and throw away 2700W for the primary Use Case doesn't sound very good - that's a heavy motor and high Amps, highish voltage battery that is essentially being wasted - the available high speed is actually unwanted. (If it were the only solution, it might be still be attractive, but...)
  • A gear motor runs at 5 times the rpm which in part accounts for the improved efficiency at low rpm, but the gearing is fixed and there are no hulking big gear motors to do that job - a single MAC12T can't muster the power to carry the load unassisted at that speed and the resulting even lower speed will send the efficiency to very low levels. Estimates using the ebikes.ca simulator indicate 6% efficiency and overheating in 48 seconds - achieving less than 1mph at 50A.
  • The dual MAC 12T approach comes in at about 80% efficiency but the fixed gearing and oversized motors (really designed to be going much much faster than required here) still leave it drawing heavy amps (~55A)although the voltage will be low (i.e. it's 80% efficient but the winding and gearing make for a natively low voltage/high amp solution).
  • the StokeMonkey is going to be about 80% efficent as well but the gearing and winding make it a lower current solution. Unlike the MAC with fixed gearing, the StokeMonkey will always get you up the hill - just more slowly - and the motor is sized more appropriately for your desired speed on the flat. Other middrive solutions carry the same characteristics.
It should be clear that any suggestion that a 250W motor or 'any hubmotor kit will help' is nonsense - the requirement that you do not make a material contribution means that the motor must do the bulk of the work. The motor output power requirement of ~1000W is such that low powered kits will melt - the speed is so slow and the efficiency so low that virtually all the motor power will go to heat. Similarly, a single 12T also appears to be inadequate (although it seems workable for 20% grades).

The dual 12T will do the job and is a relatively easy build for any frame. It does have a top speed you don't need and is still using a lot of amps at your target speed (<60A). You could remedy this with an EM3EV INR18650-20R battery which Paul rates at 5C (de-rated from cell rating of 10C). The 17.5Ah triangle battery would give you 80A+ but a slightly smaller custom built battery might be a better fit since you don't really need the range - just short-term high C-rate. A Cycle Anaylst V3 would be a good addition to limit current and monitor temperature.

The StokeMonkey (or maybe other middrive) is probably going to get you what you want with a motor sized for your needs in all cases - good hill climbing (assuming appropriate gearing), limited top speed, and good enough efficiency while climbing that you can use a small battery solution. The StokeMonkey was designed specifically for SF hills and is a proven solution. Frame design may be a concern. If you want to go with a new bigger frame, a Mundo or Edgerunner would give you a nice 'station wagon' vehicle that is durable and should haul kids for many years to come.

This 31% grade is the killer - go the long 20%-grade route and a single 12T should work as well.

This is basically a rehash of what dogman and others have already said, but with a couple of numbers thrown in to show 'why'... :D
 
Just some real world experience with a 30% hill and a DD hub last year. It is only a short section of about 800m uphill. I used my Cromotor and a lot of LiPo. I kept my speed high 40-50kmh, much higher than the OP wants. Notice the Temp going up from 56oC to 65oC for this short section. If I would go slower, the temp increase would be even higher.

http://vimeo.com/69832668
 
Hi All-

Thanks for the all the replies!

I apologize for the confusion. I have never made it up the 32% hills, at all. Just the 15-17% hills at 3mph in granny gear - That's super hard work. My text was confusing. I would never attack the steepest hill, I added that for context. The way around is only 5-6 blocks further. The distances are short. Too short for cars, too long to walk. Yes, SF is dangerous for bikes. So it's a toss up.

I think I will experiment this summer with a mid-drive 350W bafang. I have a Schwinn city bike that has an 8 gear cassette and a 3 gear hub, so that would get really low for the mid-drive to help me crank up the hill and not bring any drag for the rest of the drive.

I'll also reach out to Ilya at SF Bikes this Summer. Thanks again community - you guys rock.

K
 
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