fractal
1 kW
- Joined
- May 10, 2011
- Messages
- 322
excellent idea, thanks!!!oatnet said:There is that triangular hole behind the headtube - you could pass a bolt through that, and tie the pack to that, to keep it from sliding back.
-JD
excellent idea, thanks!!!oatnet said:There is that triangular hole behind the headtube - you could pass a bolt through that, and tie the pack to that, to keep it from sliding back.
-JD
fractal said:sn0wchyld said:fractal said:I got a lot of work done of the battery boxes and mounting brackets. The boxes are made of 1\8 ABS and the brackets are 1\8 aluminium that are joined together by coupling bolts wich makes it easy for adjusting the width on the frame to make a tight fit. The boxes are made for 6 bricks of lipo each with lots of room for wires, parallel boards, ...etc. I still have to add more coupling bolts to solidify the whole thing. There are still a few adjustments to be made before this part of the project is finished. Check it out :
lookin tidy mate! you probably are planing already, but make sure you have something to spread the weight from those bolts onto the frame... either heaps of padding or a curved peice of alloy, or both... dont want to be denting up that precious piece of art!
Yeah I'm still thinking about how to do that. Maybe a piece of super rigid foam or something like that. I also got some rubber sheet to glue on the back of the brackets to protec the frame.
oatnet said:Good progress, Frac!
Standard practice is to put the fuse in the middle of the pack, not at one end. The middle position will also protect against some shorts within the pack, and to cut your voltage in half in the event of a problem.
-JD
oatnet said:Good progress, Frac!
Standard practice is to put the fuse in the middle of the pack, not at one end. The middle position will also protect against some shorts within the pack, and to cut your voltage in half in the event of a problem.
-JD
Thanks for the tips guys!!!icecube57 said:oatnet said:Good progress, Frac!
Standard practice is to put the fuse in the middle of the pack, not at one end. The middle position will also protect against some shorts within the pack, and to cut your voltage in half in the event of a problem.
-JD
I totally agree with this. To even be more protected it should be on each parallel group for even more protection. It isnt hard to do but it creates a very bulky harness.. I can create a plug if he wishes to where he can put it in the middle of the packs as you suggest. The fuse isnt going to protect the controller if the mosfets decide to do a dead internal short the damage would already be done its just protecting the batteries and one rule of fuses is to put it as close to the battery as possible which is what i did. There are several ways to do it depending on what you are trying to protect and how serviceable you want it to be.
Putting in the middle of the pack only reduces the voltage the fuse sees so there is less of an arc incase it does blow and a better chance for the fuse to do its job correctly.... I think or thats what i read on the forum.
icecube57 said:I didnt know you had dual 1420s but you got a pimpin protection system... Guess u can use my charge harness for a rainy day lol everything looks awesome.... CHEERS. What software do u use for your diagrams.
sn0wchyld said:looking good mate, particularly with the 17" on the front too. I just laced my rear to a 17" moto rim too, but it looks a bit weird/too much like a MX bike with the 26" still on the front.
Word of warning, watch your pedal clearance, particularly in the corners. Im getting way more pedal strikes now with the lower overall height. Not caused any crashes yet, but still jars your legs pretty badly. alternatively build your drop outs to raise the back by an inch or so to help compensate for the smaller wheels (I think your planning this already right?).
Any chance you can squeeze that controller in the gap between the tire and the rest of the swing arm now that there's a big gap there? Had I not mounted my 12fet already between the pedals I'd be mounting it there! 24fet's probably way to big unfortunately.
that seat looks comfy! where'd you get it/what type is it/cost?
Had a sick ride on my aline yesterday... raced a guy on a ice bike, and won easily! doing 60+km/h over speed bumps made it hard for him to keep up!just wished I'd filmed it.
Justtoby said:It's gonna hurt if you ash your knees on those boxes, have you tried them in a wind tunnel lol
Seriously though its a nice build but I think those boxes are massive.![]()
Sacman said:That's 7 or 8-inches of front suspension travel right?
Isn't that front tire gonna be hitting your boxes if you're turning and hit a big bump?![]()
(Should be okay if you're holding the wheel straight tho)
sn0wchyld said:hey frac
have you thought about putting some of your batteries in a hardcase box on the front of the handle bars? then you'll have a smaller # of packs to try and fit on the frame itself. Fitting 5 or 8 ah of 24s on to the front shouldn't take up much space or weigh too much, but it would free up allot of space on the frame.
I'm planning on doing the same myself, it was originally just going to be a 24s5ah booster pack to the 10ah I already have on the frame, but when I found I could fit 24s 8ah in the 25x15x10cm case I'd bought I'm now thinking of using that as my main battery and using frame mounted bats as booster packs, since 8ah is more than enough for my commute/shorter rides. its just a question now if the extra weight on the steering feels ok...