Neeps
1 µW
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2019
- Messages
- 4
Howdy,
I'm building an electric motorbike for the NZ Bucket class. I've helped on a few electric vehicle projects before (an Aprillia RS250, buses, a rubbish truck and soon a ferry) and want to go racing now.
These are bikes that go up to 125CC 2-stroke and 150CC 4-stroke from basic commuter bikes that get put into lightweight and racier frames and get hotted up to 20hp. The races are on go-kart circuits that go for around 10 minutes where you'll hit 90km/h top speed. The racing is tight and full of customization and a whole lot of fun.
For that style of racing I think I will need a motor comfortable to race with 15kW being put through it for 10 minutes pretty heavily, and about 2kWh of battery per race, of which there are 5 races per meet.
Batteries
I would like to use 30Q's from Samsung in a 20S 15P config that would give me 72V, 3.24kWh and 225A peak current. These batteries are available from a friend who is building packs so I will head to him for that. I have some buffer in that pack so I think we might get two race out of it, with charging at the track I might be able to do 3 races per meet.
Motor
I've looked at a few motors and the QS273 V3 70H looks like it would definitely be up to the task. I wanted to gauge ES for some help here though, there are a few people saying they are using motors rated for less power to get 15+kW, which if it works is fantastic. Are there other motors that would suit the context? I'm biased to a hub motor due to the simplicity of the system. Unsprung weight won't affect me on track, so I see no reason to go mid drive unless cost's can be reduced by using that style.
Controller
I need something to work with the 72V and ~220A that they battery can give, FOC preferred. I really liked the Mobipus 72200 but it seems that they are getting hard to come by.. Oh well. Are there any similar controllers to the Mobipus 72200?
I'm going to nail down the main components now and then look at charging later. But super excited about showing some petrol boys the future
Here's an example of the racing from my local track by the current president of the group
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXrMhIvHUI8
I'm building an electric motorbike for the NZ Bucket class. I've helped on a few electric vehicle projects before (an Aprillia RS250, buses, a rubbish truck and soon a ferry) and want to go racing now.
These are bikes that go up to 125CC 2-stroke and 150CC 4-stroke from basic commuter bikes that get put into lightweight and racier frames and get hotted up to 20hp. The races are on go-kart circuits that go for around 10 minutes where you'll hit 90km/h top speed. The racing is tight and full of customization and a whole lot of fun.
For that style of racing I think I will need a motor comfortable to race with 15kW being put through it for 10 minutes pretty heavily, and about 2kWh of battery per race, of which there are 5 races per meet.
Batteries
I would like to use 30Q's from Samsung in a 20S 15P config that would give me 72V, 3.24kWh and 225A peak current. These batteries are available from a friend who is building packs so I will head to him for that. I have some buffer in that pack so I think we might get two race out of it, with charging at the track I might be able to do 3 races per meet.
Motor
I've looked at a few motors and the QS273 V3 70H looks like it would definitely be up to the task. I wanted to gauge ES for some help here though, there are a few people saying they are using motors rated for less power to get 15+kW, which if it works is fantastic. Are there other motors that would suit the context? I'm biased to a hub motor due to the simplicity of the system. Unsprung weight won't affect me on track, so I see no reason to go mid drive unless cost's can be reduced by using that style.
Controller
I need something to work with the 72V and ~220A that they battery can give, FOC preferred. I really liked the Mobipus 72200 but it seems that they are getting hard to come by.. Oh well. Are there any similar controllers to the Mobipus 72200?
I'm going to nail down the main components now and then look at charging later. But super excited about showing some petrol boys the future


Here's an example of the racing from my local track by the current president of the group
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXrMhIvHUI8