- Joined
- Oct 28, 2022
- Messages
- 18
Thought this forum might appreciate my build.
I've got KTM dirtbike that I'm converting to electric, retaining the clutch, transmission, and original crank. I've been through a few iterations in different frames, but the right call here ended up being my 2011 KTM 300 XC. Today I finally had the time and motivation to tear down the dirtbike:
And drop the bottom end into the bike:
I've got the rough mounting locations figured out:
Awhile back, I spent some time on the forums discussing the value of a clutch and flywheel on these bikes, and the transmission is also critical to maximizing acceleration and drive/slide at low speed while also maintaining a reasonable top speed.
Next steps: Split the cases, remove the conrod, weld up the crank so it can't rotate around itself, balance it to minimize vibration, weld a sprocket mount to the rotor (or just lazyweb and weld the sprocket directly), build the motor mounts and battery box. Then find a location for the controller, wire everything up, and it should be ready to go.
As to why I'm going through all this work, well:
1. The Brammo Empulse R taught me that a transmission on electrics bike actually rules. Having quick acceleration at low speeds and a high top speed is good! You don't need as many gears on an electric - a 3 speed would probably be fine, maybe 4, but a gearbox gives back much more in usable acceleration than it costs you. This goes double when you can run the motor in higher efficiency ranges because RPM isn't strictly linked to road speed. In the early days of cars, we compensated for a lack of transmission gears and quality with bigger motors, but packaging and motor availability is a problem on bikes.
2. A clutch and flywheel is critical for managing rapidly variable traction and aggressive power delivery. If you're on a motocross track that is groomed and has relatively consistent traction, you don't give up much. But for hard enduro, trials, and getting the most power to the ground when you need it, you can't ride the same way if you don't have a clutch/flywheel to store and deliver bursts of power to the ground. It also means you can modulate a much more aggressive power delivery, because when you need to reduce power you can just slip the clutch a bit.
There are a few transmission / clutch motors out there, but none with the flywheel mass I want or the power level I want, so here we are.
With 2.5kw of battery, I should be able to do about 20 miles with this, which is fine for our shorter days. There's space for plenty more battery. Weight should be equivalent to stock, but much lower CoG.
I've got KTM dirtbike that I'm converting to electric, retaining the clutch, transmission, and original crank. I've been through a few iterations in different frames, but the right call here ended up being my 2011 KTM 300 XC. Today I finally had the time and motivation to tear down the dirtbike:
And drop the bottom end into the bike:
I've got the rough mounting locations figured out:
Awhile back, I spent some time on the forums discussing the value of a clutch and flywheel on these bikes, and the transmission is also critical to maximizing acceleration and drive/slide at low speed while also maintaining a reasonable top speed.
Next steps: Split the cases, remove the conrod, weld up the crank so it can't rotate around itself, balance it to minimize vibration, weld a sprocket mount to the rotor (or just lazyweb and weld the sprocket directly), build the motor mounts and battery box. Then find a location for the controller, wire everything up, and it should be ready to go.
As to why I'm going through all this work, well:
1. The Brammo Empulse R taught me that a transmission on electrics bike actually rules. Having quick acceleration at low speeds and a high top speed is good! You don't need as many gears on an electric - a 3 speed would probably be fine, maybe 4, but a gearbox gives back much more in usable acceleration than it costs you. This goes double when you can run the motor in higher efficiency ranges because RPM isn't strictly linked to road speed. In the early days of cars, we compensated for a lack of transmission gears and quality with bigger motors, but packaging and motor availability is a problem on bikes.
2. A clutch and flywheel is critical for managing rapidly variable traction and aggressive power delivery. If you're on a motocross track that is groomed and has relatively consistent traction, you don't give up much. But for hard enduro, trials, and getting the most power to the ground when you need it, you can't ride the same way if you don't have a clutch/flywheel to store and deliver bursts of power to the ground. It also means you can modulate a much more aggressive power delivery, because when you need to reduce power you can just slip the clutch a bit.
There are a few transmission / clutch motors out there, but none with the flywheel mass I want or the power level I want, so here we are.
With 2.5kw of battery, I should be able to do about 20 miles with this, which is fine for our shorter days. There's space for plenty more battery. Weight should be equivalent to stock, but much lower CoG.