Seaniboi82
1 µW
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2015
- Messages
- 4
Hi all. I'm a Design & Technology High School teacher with a background in carpentry (not engineering) and I've been given an engineering class called Electric Vehicle Challenge, where we make 3 wheeled EVs and race off against other schools. The vehicle that completes the most laps of a Kart track in an hour wins.
I used the EV from last yr as a starting point, which was primarily made out of cut up student desks and weighed in at +60kg. This year we used primarily aluminium and shaved off quite a bit of weight. We also ran the same hub motors (magic pie golden motor) and batteries (eagle electric 36V 10AH) as last yr. I'm told we were much more competitive this year (apparently we were at the back of the race last yr), but we were still slightly off the pace of the leaders.
How do I step it up again next yr? I'll definitely be purchasing new batteries, which are prescribed (36V10AH for the first race and 36V16AH for the 2nd) and I was also thinking of purchasing new motors. Should I just purchase another GM with the internal controller or go with something new? If I buy new should I go with a geared or gearless hub motor? I've read that geared is more efficient, but slower. How many amps should I be running?
I've always worked with timber, so this has been quite a stretch for me this yr. Any advice would be appreciated.
I used the EV from last yr as a starting point, which was primarily made out of cut up student desks and weighed in at +60kg. This year we used primarily aluminium and shaved off quite a bit of weight. We also ran the same hub motors (magic pie golden motor) and batteries (eagle electric 36V 10AH) as last yr. I'm told we were much more competitive this year (apparently we were at the back of the race last yr), but we were still slightly off the pace of the leaders.
How do I step it up again next yr? I'll definitely be purchasing new batteries, which are prescribed (36V10AH for the first race and 36V16AH for the 2nd) and I was also thinking of purchasing new motors. Should I just purchase another GM with the internal controller or go with something new? If I buy new should I go with a geared or gearless hub motor? I've read that geared is more efficient, but slower. How many amps should I be running?
I've always worked with timber, so this has been quite a stretch for me this yr. Any advice would be appreciated.

