gknowes
10 mW
lightningrods, are you going to have a website where we can go , to see all the goodies
you have to sale ?
gknowes said:lightningrods, are you going to have a website where we can go , to see all the goodiesyou have to sale ?
Tinto said:Wow! Great longevity effort.
I've been through 3 and I'm at around 600km.
You sanded / filed the small belt wheel didn't you?
I remember you giving me that advice, it will be the next thing I work on!
4 new belts are on their way to me at the moment.
speedmd said:Hi Skyungjae
Great riding getting this to last as long as you have. Good advise also.
I have been doing the opposite with my chain modded kit. Burning out in the gravel drive way while leaning over the bars, flipping it over doing wheelies while clipped into the pedals, trying to climb stuff from a stand still that it just can not do while in too big a gear
. I know something is going to break
Still not any play in the little chain
. Dog hates the sound of this bike and I hope we can make friends with it. :?
speedmd said:Impact is the best method to get stuff apart! Small hammer and solid piece of soft metal (aluminum, brass, copper) hitting on the knock out areas of the pulley while holding the center hub from spinning freely. You may need a extra set of hands.
skyungjae said:Despite wider belt options being available via LightningRods, I'm starting to think that his future chain drive options may be the way to go. It seems like, due to the less wrap, some people are getting teeth jumping on belts using just the adjustable sheets alone. Of course there are other factors that may come into play such as improper alignment or not enough tension, but I'm not sure if a wider belt kit will remedy this. This is why I want to wait for everything he has to offer than simply get the slip on sleeve pulley and adjustable sheets.
We'll see. I'd love to let loose doing wheelies and burn outs. Unfortunately, I am running into a battery problem since I've done my shunt mod. I think I'm overusing my Zippy LiFePO4 packs and will have to find a more suitable power source. At about 4Ah, if I put the batteries under heavy load, the voltage will sag under 41V and that causes my 44V LVC, set by my Cycle Analyst, to cut power. If this happens while going up a steep hill, the power cutting in and out will cause the belt to jump teeth. This used to happen when I was at around 6Ah...![]()
LightningRods said:I've been working for weeks developing a #219 secondary drive for the Gen 1 kits. I designed a 3/4" to 11mm adapter so that I could fit a 12 tooth 219 driver on the secondary. I also designed a freewheel to 5 1/4" kart sprocket adapter plate. The 3/4" to 11mm will work with 12T, 13T and 14T 219 sprockets with a 3/4" bore. There is a HUGE range of kart sprockets available from 65T to 93T. A 75T is almost identical in diameter to a 48T 1/2" chain sprocket. The difference is the .3" link pitch. Because of the quality and side plate thickness of good Japanese and German 219 chain they are good up to 15+ horsepower. More than enough for the GNG.
E-Norco said:Great idea to use 219 chain LightningRods.
If i use (48v) a 13t motor pinion with 68t chainwheel with 25h chain the jack shaft will spin = 622RPM (ratio 5,2:1)
then i need a 15t 219chain kart pinion and a 63t kart chainring and the cadence will be 148RPM (ratio 4,1:1) = overall geardown 21,3:1
With a 42t chainring that drives the stock chain to the rear wheel it will be a nice setup to pedal with at 48v.
Is this right?
Thanks E-Norco. It's a great idea once it works. I am eager to see how it works on the road.
I think your reduction gearing is too high. The primary side is just a bit high at 5.2:1. On the secondary side I would go for a 12T driver and at least a 72 tooth chainring for 6:1. A cadence of 100 is considered fast. I prefer pushing harder at a slower rpm myself. I like 75 to 80 rpm. I am setting my own bike up with 18/120 on the primary for 6.66:1 and 12/80 on the secondary for 6.66:1. This gives an overall of about 44:1 or 75 rpm @ 48 volts.
One of the tricky bits about mid drives is that you have to reduce the motor rpm way down to match the puny human powerband of 0-100 rpm and then gear it back up again to turn that 100 rpm into enough wheel rpm to have the top speed that you want. The reduction gearing and final drive gearing are two totally separate issues. Trying to apply all of the power in a mid drive to high speed is a problem because small rear sprockets can't take the torque without skipping. If you want a high top speed bike you want to use the largest chainwheel driver sprocket that will fit.
E-Norco said:I have got a 11-34t casette and the biggest fitting chainring will be a 42t.
calculated with 26inch wheel:
1.At 148RPM and 42t chainring the max speed at 34t will be about 22km/h and at 11t about 67km/h
2.At 100RPM and 42t chainring the max Speed at 34t will be about 15km/h and at 11t about 45km/h
If my calculations are right at the first option you can use the gears in the middle of the casette for less chain skipping.
For a good highspeed at 100RPM you'll need a large chainwheel and this will make it hard to move the bike without battery.
The question is if the first reduction like i planned (13t-68t) is good to bring the motor power to the jackshaft?
Secret1511 said:Here is my chain mod.
I keep breaking belts so let's hope this is the solution
I used the freewheel 65T that bzhwindtalker came up with. The small spocket is a 11T. Makes a bit noise.
Question: I want 1 freewheel in the system so the small one has to go. What is the best sprocket to go for?