electric Trike Conversion Kit and battery for KMX Typhoon

Joined
Sep 21, 2012
Messages
12
Hi all,

i try buy which electric Trike Conversion Kit and battery for KMX Typhoon

Im get KMX Typhoon, i buy e-bike kit no now, will later buy.

I want all 36V or 48V 250w motor kit for up to 26mph and with battery, pedal + Throttle. good low pirce both motor kit, battery. i ride on road uk.

if 36V 24" or 20" rear wheel How go fast full mph? another 44V,46V?
24" rear wheel can put the KMX Typhoon?
if yes i will buy 24" or 20" wheel e-trike.

i want battery/batteries with Aluminium, bottle shape battery or rack battery + keys. Controller + LCD Display.
pedal speed + Throttle or Thumb.

please let me which e-bike kit link online, (Hub Motor, rear Wheel Type size, Speed Throttle, Controllers, e.g) Can match on KMX Typhoon

Thanks

Jatinder
 
Hi all,

Im get KMX Typhoon, i buy e-bike kit no now, will later buy.

I want all 36V or 48V 250w motor kit for up to 26mph and with battery, pedal + Throttle. good low pirce both motor kit, battery. i ride on road uk.

i want battery/batteries with Aluminium, bottle shape battery or rack battery + keys. Controller + LCD Display.
pedal speed + Throttle or Thumb.

please let me which e-bike kit link online, (Hub Motor, rear Wheel Type size, Speed Throttle, Controllers, e.g) Can match on KMX Typhoon

Thanks,

Jatinder


(moderator edit: merged your posts into a single thread, as they are for the same thing. i also moved them from E Vehicles general to EBike general, as it is more likely to be seen there and is more appropriate. Please do not create multiple threads for the same thing. Be patient and wait for people to have time to respond to you, and if htey dont' after what you feel is sufficient time, bump your original thread by posting to it again.)
 
Basically any 20" rear wheel kit should work. I just put a 20" nine continent 2805 motor from ebikes.ca on a KMX frame and it works great. I'm running 10AH of 18S lipo (~65V). Top speed is about 38 mph and the range is around 15 miles. I'm using a 25A infineon controller.

Do some reading on the sticky theads that discuss FAQ's, motors, batteries etc, on here to build up your general knowledge if your new to the ebike scene. There are lots of options, some better than other, some more approachable than others depending on your experience, knowledge and skills. For example, RC lipo batteries get you a lot of energy for the price, but they're a pain to wire up (lots of soldering and custom harnesses required) and are dangerous if not handled and used correctly. There are also a few general types of motors such as geared or direct drive that you'll want to familiarize yourself with before making a decision about how to do your build.

Welcome to endless sphere!
 
andrew.box said:
Basically any 20" rear wheel kit should work. I just put a 20" nine continent 2805 motor from ebikes.ca on a KMX frame and it works great. I'm running 10AH of 18S lipo (~65V). Top speed is about 38 mph and the range is around 15 miles. I'm using a 25A infineon controller.

Do some reading on the sticky theads that discuss FAQ's, motors, batteries etc, on here to build up your general knowledge if your new to the ebike scene. There are lots of options, some better than other, some more approachable than others depending on your experience, knowledge and skills. For example, RC lipo batteries get you a lot of energy for the price, but they're a pain to wire up (lots of soldering and custom harnesses required) and are dangerous if not handled and used correctly. There are also a few general types of motors such as geared or direct drive that you'll want to familiarize yourself with before making a decision about how to do your build.

Welcome to endless sphere!

Hi,

20" nine continent 2805 motor is which watt? but i want only 250Watt bcoz can allow on road UK.
 
Total power for your system is determined by the voltage of your battery and maximum current your controller (or batteries if they're the limiting factor). A motor itself doesn't necessarily have a "power" other other than the the maximum power it can take and dissipate as heat before getting damaged. That can depend on a number of things and a motor can usually handle large amounts of power for short durations, but less power if it's applied continuously over a long period of time.

To try and answer your question, a 9c motor can handle at least 1800W of power for several minutes (that's what I'm running and it doesn't get more than a bit warm). I know some people run higher power with them but often allow better cooling by drilling holes in the side cover to let air flow, but I can't speak to this since I haven't done it myself.

If your concern is keeping power below the legal limit, and in the event you were pulled over and they somehow audited your bike to determine it's power output, you would want to keep battery volts X controller amps below 250. For example, a 48V battery and 10A controller will deliver around 480W power to the motor. I don't live in the UK though and can't say for sure how they deal with trying to bust someone suspected of riding a bike with more than 250 watts power.
 
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