El_Steak
10 kW
Well, it sure took me a while, but I finally got the time to put my new "bike-like-bike" together.
Quick review:
It’s a pretty much exactly what I wanted. The bike is almost half the weight of my fast “super commuter” which weights 100lbs with the battery.
Unlike the super commuter, it feels like a bike, not a motorcycle, it’s perfect to pedal in top gear at full throttle and it’s easy to maneuver.
It’s also stealthier and quieter.
At first I found the Grin 15A mini-controller a bit too weak on acceleration but after a couple of commutes to work, I find it more than adequate. I guess I was still used to the wheely popping acceleration of my 100V 100A bike.
Top speed on the flats is a bit over 40km/h and it doesn't take too long to get there. It will also happily climb moderate hills.
The bike is very efficient compared to my super commuter as I only need 350Wh for my 28km commute with moderate pedalling (no sweat). My current 12s3p pack at 666Wh is a bit oversized and I may downsize it to 12s2p which would bring the bike's total weight to just under 50 pounds.
The specs:
Bike: 2013 Specialized Sirrus, steel fork, 700x32c wheels
Motor: Grin - Outrider mini front hub, standard speed (288 rpm @ 36V)
Controller: Grin – 15A mini controller
Battery: Turnigy 44.4V, 15ah (12s3p)
Charger: Hyperion 1420i with custom DB25 connector (single connection)
Other: Cycle Analyst 2.3
The numbers:
My weight: 160 lbs (5’ 7”)
Bike weight: 54 lbs total (with the battery)
Top speed: 42km/h (flat road, fresh battery)
Top amps: 13.9A (while accelerating)
Top watts: 660w (while accelerating)
Cruising watts: around 500w at top speed, flat, no wind
Consumption: 12.5 Wh/km average on my 28 km commute
Nitpicking:
- It would have been nice to have mounting brackets on the controller, but I managed to secure it with tie wraps
- The special washers with the little bent lips where installed backwards on my motor and I had to cut/rewire the JST hall connector to flip the washer on the phase wire side.
- an extra couple of inches on the controller phase wire would have given me more options to mount it.
The picture:
Quick review:
It’s a pretty much exactly what I wanted. The bike is almost half the weight of my fast “super commuter” which weights 100lbs with the battery.
Unlike the super commuter, it feels like a bike, not a motorcycle, it’s perfect to pedal in top gear at full throttle and it’s easy to maneuver.
It’s also stealthier and quieter.
At first I found the Grin 15A mini-controller a bit too weak on acceleration but after a couple of commutes to work, I find it more than adequate. I guess I was still used to the wheely popping acceleration of my 100V 100A bike.
Top speed on the flats is a bit over 40km/h and it doesn't take too long to get there. It will also happily climb moderate hills.
The bike is very efficient compared to my super commuter as I only need 350Wh for my 28km commute with moderate pedalling (no sweat). My current 12s3p pack at 666Wh is a bit oversized and I may downsize it to 12s2p which would bring the bike's total weight to just under 50 pounds.
The specs:
Bike: 2013 Specialized Sirrus, steel fork, 700x32c wheels
Motor: Grin - Outrider mini front hub, standard speed (288 rpm @ 36V)
Controller: Grin – 15A mini controller
Battery: Turnigy 44.4V, 15ah (12s3p)
Charger: Hyperion 1420i with custom DB25 connector (single connection)
Other: Cycle Analyst 2.3
The numbers:
My weight: 160 lbs (5’ 7”)
Bike weight: 54 lbs total (with the battery)
Top speed: 42km/h (flat road, fresh battery)
Top amps: 13.9A (while accelerating)
Top watts: 660w (while accelerating)
Cruising watts: around 500w at top speed, flat, no wind
Consumption: 12.5 Wh/km average on my 28 km commute
Nitpicking:
- It would have been nice to have mounting brackets on the controller, but I managed to secure it with tie wraps
- The special washers with the little bent lips where installed backwards on my motor and I had to cut/rewire the JST hall connector to flip the washer on the phase wire side.
- an extra couple of inches on the controller phase wire would have given me more options to mount it.
The picture:
