lbz5mc12 said:
I found an interesting disk brake mountable gear on amazon made by origin 8. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008ZTLYOE/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_S_img?_encoding=UTF8&colid=2SRYXRN13FLKU&coliid=I15OPEUCC05UGY. I was thinking what if you were to bolt this on to a brushless hub motor and run a chain from it to a small Currie style motor? You use the regen while using the Currie motor to turn the hub motor along with pedaling. This would significantly lessen the resistant feeling of pedaling a bike with the regen engaged. Not only that you could use both motors at the same time like you would on a dual motor bike for climbing hills and greater acceleration. Just a though, I'm still working out the other details in my head. I have almost everything I need to try it. I just need a 24V battery pack, the gear and a way to mount the Currie motor over my front wheel. My Currie motor has a freewheel gear so I wouldn't have any resistance from just using the hub motor to drive the bike.
I'm afraid I don't understand exactly what you're wanting to do.
I *think* you are talking about using one motor simply as a brake, and only using the other motor as the drive motor?
That'd be kind of a waste, especially since you are adding weight and complexity, having each motor plus it's own controller and wiring and whatnot, perhaps it's own battery pack, but only using one as a motor and one as a brake, when you could easily use just one of them as a brake.
There will actually be a little more drag on the system even on the flats because of hte extra motor, even with the freewheel there is sitll some resistance though it's small enough you problaby won't feel it. That, plus the extra mass of the additional system, will actually make your bike less efficient, and harder to accelrate and to go up hills because it weighs more.
If you want ot use the currie as a drive motor thru the side of the hubmotor, then you have ot set it up so it doesn't freewheel in the drive direciton, but only freewheels in the braking direciton (and thus can't be used as a brake). And ot use it as a brake, the freewheel will prevent using it to drive.
If you are talking about using the hub motor in regen mode *all the tiem* while using hte currie to drive the bike, well, you have just invented a power-wasting device.

You can read all the other threads about that sort of thing scattered around the forum over the years, where people want ot use one motor to regen/capture energy at the same time the other motor drives.
If you want ot use them both for motors, then it makes some sense to add the currie to make 2WD, if you need the extra power for accleration or hill climbing, but since you are also adding the weight of motor/battery/contorller you are also using some of tha tpower just to acclerate/lift that added weight (that's the disadvantage of any 2WD system, plus it's one more thing to fail...though it also gives you redundancy in case the main systme fails).