I don't mean to be difficult or controversial here. My numbers are coming from measuring the various diameters on the BikeOn website pictures, assuming a red ring inside diameter of 175 mm from a picture that Aram graciously provided me.
I do not doubt that the BikeOn drive mounts without problem on a 36 teeth cog. That is the innermost cog in the cassette, and the cog that the red ring clamps onto with the black teeth.
But as far the maximum diameter of the cog
driven by the chain is concerned, a 135 mm / 33 teeth cog seems the maximum that can clear that bearing, judging from the pictures available to me.
If the bearing rotates with the chain, 135 mm diameter or 33 teeth is ok. (I might be off by a mm or two.)
If the bearing (or bearing housing) is stationary, or rotates with the red ring (i.e. against the chain direction if the chain were to contact it from below), then the chain has to have a straight path (tangent) from the top of the largest possible chain driven cog, clearing that top bearing, to the torque sensor. I measure that to be a cog of 104 mm diameter or 26 teeth. Again, I might be off by a mm or two.
I acknowledge that I might be the only one who wants to preserve the slowest possible gear while using the BikeOn drive.
Maybe the continuous power of the BikeOn drive is so large that I wouldn't need that largest cog.
I don't know.
What I do know is that I can do a 6.5% grade at about 5 mph with about 60rpm cadence and 34 front teeth and 34 rear teeth comfortably, with both the e
bike.ca motor simulator and the
An interactive model-based calculator of cycling power vs. speed bicycle simulator telling me I need about 150 W of human power. Clearly I don't want to pedal at 120 rpm and 9.5mph with an additional 150 W from the motor, so I do not need the 34 teeth rear cog, but I would like to know how much headroom I have. If the motor can do 150 W continuously, then a 22 teeth rear cog is fine, and gets me to 73 rpm, which is great.