ICE powerplants use transmissions like crutches to help them limp around with devices that make 0torque at 0rpm
But why dont the flagship production E bikes, Zero, Lightening, etc,....use hub motors
speedmd said:In the tesla example, if you were to make the motor roughly 3 times the diameter, you would have roughly the same low end torque in a direct drive setup. It should also be able to rev and pull way past the current cars top speed with the same technology. No?
Im asure that they are key factors, but i suspect there is much more to it,spinningmagnets said:But why dont the flagship production E bikes, Zero, Lightening, etc,....use hub motors
Higher magnet speed (in the motor) in relation to the wheel RPMs, plus makes the unsprung weight much better for the suspension response. Centralizing the weight also helps cornering.
Is it, i thought we were debating the need for any transmission on an EV, single reduction or multigear ?spinningmagnets said:...However, the discussions here are transmission Vs one-speed.
Hillhater said:speedmd said:In the tesla example, if you were to make the motor roughly 3 times the diameter, you would have roughly the same low end torque in a direct drive setup. It should also be able to rev and pull way past the current cars top speed with the same technology. No?
Maybe, if 3 times the diameter can give 8 times the torque ?.....
...but the weight increases disproportionately, and a big motor inevitably needs a bigger battery ( more weight again) , so unless you actually can produce more torque than the geared motor, you will lose performance
Hillhater said:Im asure that they are key factors, but i suspect there is much more to it,spinningmagnets said:But why dont the flagship production E bikes, Zero, Lightening, etc,....use hub motors
Higher magnet speed (in the motor) in relation to the wheel RPMs, plus makes the unsprung weight much better for the suspension response. Centralizing the weight also helps cornering.
IE, wouldnt the motor have to be bigger and heavier than the high Rpm unit ?
Wouldnt the battery spec need to be changed to suit the hub motor ?
The overall package weight would increase.
Is it, i thought we were debating the need for any transmission on an EV, single reduction or multigear ?spinningmagnets said:...However, the discussions here are transmission Vs one-speed.
Obviously, you shouldn't. You are starting with a power limited motor which is probably itself not very efficient. Its speed is reduced through two stages (?) to match pedal cadence speed. Its speed is then increased again by the chain drive to the derailleur. You have a rather underpowered and inefficient set up but it does at least allow you to change ratios with little penalty.motomoto said:Ok Ok I lost this argument. I am taking the rear sprockets off of my Bafang BBSHD setup and putting on one sprocket
for my trail rides.
a better option to eliminate having the torque get combined in a differential and instead have a 2x larger diameter independent motor per wheel. Having the differential in an oil bath is a very small loss when you're at peak power, but becomes meaningful at cruise power levels.
Arlo1 said:DanGT86 said:I have always heard that each stage of reduction subtracts efficiency. Why exactly is that? If a gearbox or jackshaft was setup to do say 10:1 in 2 stages vs a single stage with 10tooth motor 100toot rear, would the 2 stage be that much worse? Is it the addition of another shaft and bearings that kills the efficiency? I was under the impression that reductions with large size differentials between the driving and driven sprocket/gear are inefficient. So wouldn't the 2 stage have some advantage being that the driving vs driven sprockets would be closer to the same size at each stage?
Seems like as long as you have the same amount of chain on the same qty of teeth then the efficiency loss would be close to the same. Not trying to argue a point I'm just curious about some of these generalizations I have heard thrown around.
Its this simple. The gears oil and bearings and other moving parts all have friction and drag causing losses. A properly designed motor that is slightly larger in size does not have any increase in drag.
toolman2 said:Its this simple. The gears oil and bearings and other moving parts all have friction and drag causing losses. A properly designed motor that is slightly larger in size does not have any increase in drag.
Larger motors will have lower max RPMs before they self destruct from centripetal forces. The gyroscopic precessional forces can become an issue with large fast rotors as well. In a car such as a Tesla, the wheel speed is easily within RPM ranges of any reasonable motor, but the reduction gear is needed to multiply torque, which pushes the motor near max RPM at max car speed. The motor sizing plus reduction gear is a much lighter weight solution to maximize torque and also minimize motor heating within the speed envelope, than would be a larger motor.speedmd said:In the tesla example, if you were to make the motor roughly 3 times the diameter, you would have roughly the same low end torque in a direct drive setup. It should also be able to rev and pull way past the current cars top speed with the same technology. No?
alan said:[arguments for not using trannys when other factors are included, which include most real-world applications.
speedmd said:It was on field weakening. https://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=63467&start=50
Bullshit!alan said:To address a previous point, a well designed two speed tranny can be as efficient as a single reduction gear, built with four gears sharing two shafts, with two gears engaged at a time, and shifting done with a simple sliding of one shaft's two gears. The extra gears and syncros will only add some rotational momentum and weight, but no significant additional frictional losses (except during the shifting).
liveforphysics said:3x diameter does offer 8x torque. Think about it like unrolling the motor, and you see you have both a longer strip of stator/rotor interaction area, as well as applying that force onto a longer lever arm.
However, in the case of the Tesla, it seems like it would be a better option to eliminate having the torque get combined in a differential and instead have a 2x larger diameter independent motor per wheel.
..."..........
A direct drive motor doesn't need to weigh even a tiny bit more than a tiny high RPM motor, it merely needs to use the electrical materials at the same rate as the tiny high RPM motor. This can mean the motor requires a very high pole count rotor if the needed RPM range is very low, which can lead to issues in manufacturing, and the structure to securely support the tiny thin stator teeth can get to be a substantial engineering project. On paper it should always be capable of being lighter to be single stage, in practice it's almost never done due to mfg and engineering related challenges to use the iron at the same rate some tiny motors at high RPMs do.
toolman2 said:-This all reminds me of debating with Luke maby 5 or 7 years back when he wanted to use 100-80 hobby king motors at 15-20 000rpm and use something like 6 tooth sprockets, ceramic bearings and wrap the can in carbon fiber to stop it exploding, he refused to accept the existence of eddy current losses that i had actually measured, that might limit the useful rpm. Those days when you didn't listen were special, don't you think Luke?![]()
A simple two-speed tranny can have an input shaft and an output shaft (exactly like a reduction gearset with the same number of bearings, having the same loading based almost entirely on the torque loads and not the mass of the gears) with two gears on each shaft. Say the input shaft has a large gear A and a smaller gear B, and the output shaft has a smaller gear C and a larger gear D. A and B can be spaced apart and C and D can be close together. C and D move together on the output shaft so that either A and C are engaged or B and D are engaged. The synchros and sliding mechanism (throw-out) can be designed such that each part is only in contact with any rotating part during the shift, or spin exactly with one shaft, when the gears are engaged, such that the ONLY additional mechanism in play when the gears are set to one speed or the other is a gear hold lock, which can also spin with the one shaft as a locking fork engaged through the center of the shaft, always rotating with the shaft, able to lock into either speed gear position. This is but one design I know of. There is ZERO additional rolling or sliding friction when the gears are engaged over what would be seen in a two fixed-gear reduction unit. There is additional mechanical complexity and weight, but NO additional frictions except during shifting. Both the shifting and locking mechanism can be done with non-contacting electro-magnets. Also, not applicable in bikes or cars, etc., but if the torque load is always in one direction, then opposite gear bias alone can be used to hold the gears in place with no locking mechanism needed.Arlo1 said:When ever you have additional gears to select they have friction points no matter how you try to build it. The gears not in use will be rolling on bearings at different speeds then the shaft causing drag/inefficiencies and they will have some sort of device like a shift fork to either move the dog type gear or the synchro to engage/disengage them this will also not be spinning with the gear causing more drag/inefficiencies
alan said:A simple two-speed tranny can have an input shaft and an output shaft (exactly like a reduction gearset with the same number of bearings, having the same loading based almost entirely on the torque loads and not the mass of the gears) with two gears on each shaft. Say the input shaft has a large gear A and a smaller gear B, and the output shaft has a smaller gear C and a larger gear D. A and B can be spaced apart and C and D can be close together. C and D move together on the output shaft so that either A and C are engaged or B and D are engaged. The synchros and sliding mechanism (throw-out) can be designed such that each part is only in contact with any rotating part during the shift, or spin exactly with one shaft, when the gears are engaged, such that the ONLY additional mechanism in play when the gears are set to one speed or the other is a gear hold lock, which can also spin with the one shaft as a locking fork engaged through the center of the shaft, always rotating with the shaft, able to lock into either speed gear position. This is but one design I know of. There is ZERO additional rolling or sliding friction when the gears are engaged over what would be seen in a two fixed-gear reduction unit. There is additional mechanical complexity and weight, but NO additional frictions except during shifting. Both the shifting and locking mechanism can be done with non-contacting electro-magnets. Also, not applicable in bikes or cars, etc., but if the torque load is always in one direction, then opposite gear bias alone can be used to hold the gears in place with no locking mechanism needed.Arlo1 said:When ever you have additional gears to select they have friction points no matter how you try to build it. The gears not in use will be rolling on bearings at different speeds then the shaft causing drag/inefficiencies and they will have some sort of device like a shift fork to either move the dog type gear or the synchro to engage/disengage them this will also not be spinning with the gear causing more drag/inefficiencies
I found Alan's above full explanation helpful and trust it's accurate along with noted 'disclaimer'. The below was actually enough for me,There is ZERO additional rolling or sliding friction when the gears are engaged over what would be seen in a two fixed-gear reduction unit.
Followed by thread specifics I further agree with.To address a previous point, a well designed two speed tranny can be as efficient as a single reduction gear, built with four gears sharing two shafts, with two gears engaged at a time, and shifting done with a simple sliding of one shaft's two gears. The extra gears and syncros will only add some rotational momentum and weight, but no significant additional frictional losses (except during the shifting). If efficiency across a wide operating range were critically important, then the tranny solution would be worthwhile, if only for a slight increase in efficiency. Max efficiency in a narrower operating range will nearly always favor a direct drive solution.
A lot of the tranny argument above was comparing apples and oranges where the efficiency/power/weight/etc. parameters of more than just the motor and tranny were being implied (such as battery and controller issues), but not clearly stated when absolute statements were being made. It is a lot like arguing which car has better aerodynamics where one side is only considering the drag coefficient and the other side is only considering the frontal area times the drag coefficient. My arguments favoring a tranny was strictly in reference to motor power in/wheel power out efficiency when high torques are needed across wide RPM ranges. That is small variations in motor efficiency across its operating range can be positively compensated by an efficient tranny. However, I agree with the practical arguments for not using trannys when other factors are included, which include most real-world applications.