Hi. I'm getting ready to upgrade from a direct drive hub motor. The motor has served its purpose of helping me familiarize myself with electric assist, but the drag it experiences when not under power predisposes me against DD hub motors. That, in turn, has to do with the way I ride and use electric assist: I want true assist, not some other source of power to move the bike. In fact, my ideal electric assist would be one that is only engaged when needed, and I need assist only when going up steep grades with a lot of weight on the bike. Outside conditions like that, I want the electric assist to be off and not causing excess drag.
My initial tests with the DD hub motor I got convinced me that I should not use it as I'd like, i.e., only on grades. It was clear to me when I mounted it and tried spinning it by hand that it had far more drag that any but the rustiest/gunkiest of standard, non-electric hubs. Giving the wheel a good hard spin by hand resulted in only about 4 full revolutions of the wheel. An old non-electric hub wheel, on the other hand, gave me about 25 full revolutions.
In any case, I got interested in geared hub motors because they are billed as having no more drag than most conventional non-electric bike hubs. But before actually investing in one and finding out for myself to what extent this is true, I thought I might be able to ask about that here. So, is it true that geared hub motors have far less drag when unpowered than do DD hub motors when unpowered? Furthermore, how do geared hub motors compare in terms of drag to a standard, non-electric bicycle hub? Would my manual spin test on a geared hub motor wheel and a standard non-electric bike wheel give about the same number of revolutions for both?
A sort of a shade-tree way of testing that, which would be a lot more accurate than the manual test, would be as follows. Mount each wheel--a geared hub motor wheel, a DD hub motor wheel, and a non-electric bike wheel--on an upturned bike frame. Have a drill handy with a sanding cylinder tightened into the chuck. Put a piece of reflective tape on a spoke near the rim. Put the sanding cyclinder against the tire on the first wheel and run the drill to maximum rpm's (if a sort of timing light could be rigged up to help count rpm's it would be more accurate). Disengage the drill from the tire and count the number of revolutions the wheel makes before stopping. Repeat the process with each wheel. The results would tell, at least as a rough percentage, which wheel had the most and which had the least drag. Anyone know of any test like this that was ever done?
My initial tests with the DD hub motor I got convinced me that I should not use it as I'd like, i.e., only on grades. It was clear to me when I mounted it and tried spinning it by hand that it had far more drag that any but the rustiest/gunkiest of standard, non-electric hubs. Giving the wheel a good hard spin by hand resulted in only about 4 full revolutions of the wheel. An old non-electric hub wheel, on the other hand, gave me about 25 full revolutions.
In any case, I got interested in geared hub motors because they are billed as having no more drag than most conventional non-electric bike hubs. But before actually investing in one and finding out for myself to what extent this is true, I thought I might be able to ask about that here. So, is it true that geared hub motors have far less drag when unpowered than do DD hub motors when unpowered? Furthermore, how do geared hub motors compare in terms of drag to a standard, non-electric bicycle hub? Would my manual spin test on a geared hub motor wheel and a standard non-electric bike wheel give about the same number of revolutions for both?
A sort of a shade-tree way of testing that, which would be a lot more accurate than the manual test, would be as follows. Mount each wheel--a geared hub motor wheel, a DD hub motor wheel, and a non-electric bike wheel--on an upturned bike frame. Have a drill handy with a sanding cylinder tightened into the chuck. Put a piece of reflective tape on a spoke near the rim. Put the sanding cyclinder against the tire on the first wheel and run the drill to maximum rpm's (if a sort of timing light could be rigged up to help count rpm's it would be more accurate). Disengage the drill from the tire and count the number of revolutions the wheel makes before stopping. Repeat the process with each wheel. The results would tell, at least as a rough percentage, which wheel had the most and which had the least drag. Anyone know of any test like this that was ever done?