DasDouble
100 kW
What is this jackshaft doing, you are talking about? 

Hardergamer said:John do you mean a side centrifugal cover that exists between the spokes, so it sort of surrounds the hub?
Hummina Shadeeba said:Hardergamer said:John do you mean a side centrifugal cover that exists between the spokes, so it sort of surrounds the hub?
i think if you covered the motor on both sides with a plate spaced a bit out axially from the motor, and the plates had a hole in the center, and blades going radially from the hole and keep going instead of spokes, I think that would work well .
or with the red painted motor posted a couple posts back maybe adding fins to the inside on the rotor support. there's a lot of space on the rotor plates that could have aluminum fins. maybe a hole at the base of the radial fin and a hole at the end.
Cowardlyduck said:Guy's the centrifugal fan has been tried plenty of times here before. John in CR has implemented some of the best I've seen. There's also been a few examples of it being tried where the blades have come loose and caused carnage inside the motor. One ES member even started 3D printing some intake scopes to sit under the disc brake....they were called the under disk impeller (UDI) from memory.
Do some searches and you should find a few examples.
I won't be doing any centrifugal setups for a number of reasons:
- Cooling is only active when moving, and proportional to speed. I need cooling mainly for steep hill climbs which are slow and I often like to stop at the top.
- There is barely any room on the outside with the chain on one side and the disc brake/calliper on the other side.
- There might be enough room inside for a small setup, but the risk of the blades contacting wires, or coming loose is too great IMO...and I have my fans I don't want to remove now.
All that being said, I think if a manufacturer was to build a hub motor with centrifugal cooling built in, it would be possible to make it work very well and not have any of these limitations apart from the lack of cooling when slow/stopped.
Cheers
I thought that the FF + hubsinks beat all this out and eliminated everyone's overheating? If you can simply pour some FF into the motor and then slap on a hubsinks and that eliminates your overheating why bother with these other methods.
Offroader said:To be totally honest, I would be extremely happy if the FF worked just as well because I don't really want to deal with Fans and the electronics to power the fans. I'd simply rather just use a sealed motor with absolutely no noise.
Rix, I'm going to have to do my own testing on this FF. I actually have two v3 cromotors
DasDouble said:Just want to mention: I have 8ml ff and Im still able to overheat the motor when riding hard. So ff without fins is still not overheat proof.
Rix said:Rix, I'm going to have to do my own testing on this FF. I actually have two v3 cromotors
That's why I mentioned it. Having the exact same motors puts you in position to experiment and find out which set up will cool the best, and which one you will like the most. Share your findings.
.madin88 said:Offroader said:To be totally honest, I would be extremely happy if the FF worked just as well because I don't really want to deal with Fans and the electronics to power the fans. I'd simply rather just use a sealed motor with absolutely no noise.
You really should try it out now and compare the result by yourself
I believe, as already mentioned, that your edf cooling system will be ahead when climbing slowly around, because it will remove the heat from the windings inside the motor, while FF "only" improves the heat path to the shell.
burningwings said:This is sure to cause some controversy ! First my bike : Beach cruiser type frame 24 " x 2.5 " wheels H 3540 with cooling fins , battery 18 x 12 18650 pf cells , controller Lyn 18 FET 100amp . At wot 6000 watt max output . I ride on flat streets in Sacramento . If I take off at wot , overheating after multiple time becomes a problem . With only the fins I can go 12 times in a row 0 to 30 mph before the temperature reaches the C125 degree cut off is reached . Sealed the motor with permatex and added 100ml of soybean oil . Was able to go 48 times 0to 30 at 6000 watts before hitting 125c . So adding the oil increased the runs for 12 to 48 !! Finns and oil were outstanding until the oil started leaking out of the bearings . Flushed out the oil with alcohol and added 5ml statoraid . Redid the same test got 18 runs before c125 . Then it leaked out on the rear brake as well . My test is brutal full 6000 watt runs not cooling between runs . So IF you could keep the oil in the motor , heating problem solved , statoraid , not so much !