Link
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Toshi said:one need not have Mark_A_W's handlebar setup or Link's battery box...
Hey, it's not like anyone actually SEES the thing when I'm riding it :wink:. And you're the one with a MILK CRATE bungee-corded to your rack
Toshi said:one need not have Mark_A_W's handlebar setup or Link's battery box...
And you're the one with a MILK CRATE bungee-corded to your rack.
20.3 mph average including stoplights and tooling around the Home Depot parking lots (they don't stock M12x1.25 locknuts suitable for 4-series axles, in case anyone was wondering). 18-20 mph with pedaling up hills except for the steepest, and 22-27 mph with pedaling on the flatter bits. Max of 31.9 mph with no rack incidents today...Toshi said:Today I'm going to attempt a long ride, an even 20.0 miles point to point (vs. a loop). After the rack debacle I'm going to stick to the paths of major bus routes, even if it means I'm out in traffic more often.
Until my intern year starts officially on June 19 I'm actually about equally busy (or idle) all the time... thus the opportunity to spend such time on the bike:lazarus2405 said:This weekend methinks you need to do a full range test. Pack a lunch and just ride till you can't anymore. Plan your route so you end near a bus line. :wink:
New panniers for battery (left side at the moment) and miscellaneous junk (right):
Novara Safari Panniers
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Check Tractor Supply. They'll be half the Lowes price too.lazarus2405 said:It's despicable. Lowes doesn't stock any M14 fasteners at all; they have a whole drawer for them, empty. This has been the case for me in both Oklahoma and Illinois.
Toshi said:One problem I have been having lately is the Powerpole on the battery pulling itself out a smidgen over bumps.
Thanks for the suggestion. Electrical tape seemed to work well enough, and in case my rack or panniers fail again it'd be nice to have the connector be able to pull itself apart rather than ripping through more expensive bits.kbarrett said:Maybe an anderson block-lock?Toshi said:One problem I have been having lately is the Powerpole on the battery pulling itself out a smidgen over bumps.
The machinist finished things up last night, and I picked up the new fork/torque arm setup today. It looks sweet. I'll let the photos speak for themselves:Toshi said:[On May 23rd] the machinist is coming by to pick up the wheel for torque arm fitment!
Toshi said:The machinist finished things up last night, and I picked up the new fork/torque arm setup today.
Thanks, Jeff. Proper equipment, lighting (flash is the devil), and white balance goes a long ways to making even a torque arm somewhat visually interesting...JeffD said:Very nice design - what shop did you take it to? Did the machinist come up with the design himself or did you have to supply a CAD drawing?
BTW - I think you take some of the best pics on the forum.
lazarus2405 said:It's despicable. Lowes doesn't stock any M14 fasteners at all; they have a whole drawer for them, empty. This has been the case for me in both Oklahoma and Illinois. :|
Toshi said:1) Hub motors on standard bike frames are not the ideal engineering solution, because of issues with unsprung weight, the need for torque arms to bolster fragile dropouts, and the lack of simple yet good battery mounting options without significant fabrication. Yet they are rightly widely used due to availability, cost, and the practicality of using a "normal bike" as a base.
2) The technology used in Crystalyte-style hub motors and controllers is aeons behind that in the RC world. Sure, it works and is comparatively affordable, but it should be a lot better: cheaper, lighter, much smaller, more powerful, more robust.
3) As Mark_A_W points out through his anecdote different users have different requirements. His chosen route has led him to pick a xc dual-suspension bike, and he wrote in the above thread that he's considering moving to a full-on downhill bike. Both I and recumpence, on the other hand, seem to have come to the conclusion that an unsuspended bike would better suit our needs.
4) Not everyone wants or needs an electric motorcycle. Furthermore, my view is that if one exits the e-bike arena and creates something ostensibly for the roads (no pedals, high power/capability for 30+ mph sustained on flat ground) then it must be a proper motorcycle with sturdy suspension, motorcycle tires, fully enclosed batteries, and DOT-legal lighting and signaling apparatus. I'm talking about a Jozzer setup, or, ideally, something like the Brammo Enertia (http://www.enertiabike.com).
I would NOT ride on the street on some safe-machine type abomination, and an officer of the peace would be correct in pulling me over and citing me if I did so.
5) Similarly, not everyone wants or needs an electric recumbent, streamliner, or what have you even though it may well be considerably more efficient and a more elegant engineering solution.
In my case I am constrained by the dimensions of Seattle's buses' bike racks to a standard-wheelbase bicycle, and I had and still have little desire to deal with the weight, cost, maintenance requirements, and general ugliness of suspension, especially when its action would be hindered by the very substantial unsprung weight of a hub motor. A short wheelbase recumbent with a high rider position might have worked, but at the cost of very strange packaging, small wheel sizes that love to dive into holes in the pavement, and lack of familiarity (with parts and maintenance) on my part.
Will surface rust hurt the arms or fork? I'm all for making the bike uglier and more unattractive. It does stay parked outside the hospital for 30+ hours after all...D-Man said:Dude, you should paint the torque arms! Paint is cheap! After all that work!![]()