pankaj_india
1 mW
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2010
- Messages
- 15
that was hell lot of information man ..thanks 
adrian_sm said:Remember that was only a peak, I was never drawing those sort of amps when ever I looked at my watt meter.
I am running this bike with the TURNIGY K-Force 100A Brushless ESC.
Been good so far.
Kepler said:Yes I have used the 85A ESC with this motor. Worked fine but it did get quite hot at times. Also its a pain program. I prefer the 100A K-Force.
rj7855 said:Kepler said:Yes I have used the 85A ESC with this motor. Worked fine but it did get quite hot at times. Also its a pain program. I prefer the 100A K-Force.
the problem is the 100A K-Force being on backorder at hobbyking. Did you test that 170KV motor yet, I´m very interested to know if that one would be the better option for me ( lower KV means less top but more torque and I have plenty of hills but no room for speeding on my commuter route )
Finding the thread fascinating and not wanting to hijack it, but. I wonder how stealthy, light, simple and usable a hub motor setup could be made. Use the lightest Bafang with one of Lyen's 6FET controllers and something like a 24 or 36v A123 or Lipo, 5AHr pack. Overall weight is going to be more than your setup, but not a whole lot more. The bit I'd like to see is some of the RC-style controller effort put into this to offer a current limited "Economy" mode and perhaps Kepler's work on a simple button control. Current limiting can be done with a CA, but if you don't need all the other CA stuff, it should be possible to do the current limiting with a pretty simple circuit.adrian_sm said:I didn't realise how much I like it with my hub motor.
I would really like a minimal build and first thought of the friction drive. Though after seeing Adrians progress I decided that it wouldn't fill the bill for my audible noise needs.jbond said:Use the lightest Bafang with one of Lyen's 6FET controllers and something like a 24 or 36v A123 or Lipo, 5AHr pack. Overall weight is going to be more than your setup, but not a whole lot more.adrian_sm said:I didn't realise how much I like it with my hub motor.
adrian_sm said:Noise is the other biggest issue. When the drive is pumping out the power, you can definetely hear it. Quite a contrast to the relative silence of a direct drive hub motor.
I am really keen to see how much quieter it is when I restrict power. I was doing this on the ride home by easing up on the throttle, and it make a big difference to noise levels. Maybe if I restrict it to 1000w, or 750w, or even...... 200w it will be a bit stealthier. Time will tell.
Carbon forks would scare me. What is the actual drop out where the axle rests made of?hillzofvalp said:Regarding the fixation of torque arms--- can I do this on a carbon fork?
rj7855 said:Much of the noise produced is directly released to the way the motor is being controlled ( sensorless, square wave commutation & pwm ) while we using RC ESC´s there will be not much that can be done about it but with a custom ESC it would be possible to greatly enhance the acoustic properties of the setup. As I´m waiting for the arrival of all ordered electronic parts of my current-limiting controller I have started the design of V2, an ESC with build in controller. The aim of this ESC is to counter the shortcomings of the RC ESC´s, mainly motor startup and drive noise. In the mean time you could try to see if changing the PWM frequency of your ESC makes any difference; The sound could improve on another PWM frequency if the currently selected freq. is close to the resonating frequency of the motor or friction drive mount.
adrian_sm said:What magic games do you plan on playing to reduce the noise? Sine wave? Higher PWM frequency?
adrian_sm said:And what is the plan for low speed start-up? Halls? Or just a different sensorless algorithm.