eishethel
10 µW
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2016
- Messages
- 5
Hi, I'm new to this, but have been riding a bike for a very long while.
After riding a direct drive cargo bike and using a geared hubbed fat bike for a bit, neither really was quite what I had a, for lack of a better word, craving for.
The super mundo was a more appealing idea, but also kind of fell short in a few ways.
*deep breath*
Currently, my thoughts are to use a mundo(v5) frame, a 800w direct drive front hub, and a 1.2kw-ish(20amp) brushless dc motor for the mid drive (@3600rpm and a 10x reduction) With all the above operating at 60v.
The rear hub would be a nuvinci. I'm not sure about adding an internally geared front crank, but it is a possibility. according to some math, the crusing speed would be around 26mph with the numbers we had for the various ratios, and we'd only need a freewheel to connect the riders input to the motors output spindle, and I think the rear hub and center portion could potentially be directly connected without a freewheel. The gearing is to keep rider input valid to cadence between 7mph and 27mph. With a reducer crank, that goes to 3.5mph which should be enough to get anything up a hill with the motors helping that the frame will hold. The front hub is mostly to pull the bike up to 36mph and for extending the life of the brakes.
With a bit of math, in theory, I might be able to get a overall controller to handle the shifting too to keep it range appropriate, and to avoid putting over whatever the max torque the rear hub can handle automatically.
The ratios from cranks to center and center to rear are 5:1 and 1:2 I the speeds are based on a 26 inch wheel (by notes)
unless my obervations are wrong, the way it's inline with the drive drain is a lot like a tandem bike? hence the title of the topic.
the super mundo was nice, but a large rotating thing just makes me feel uncomfortable and worried my skirt will be departing being an article of clothing. this keeps everything in a chainguardable zone.
With tire pressure sensors, you also get a bit more input on how much energy will be needed for the rider and cargo, so more accurate estimates and force reductions with heavier loads. Also, 'stall warnings' if you are attempting steep climbs with heavy stuff on the bike.
...my other random thought, was 'bike by wire'. the cranks are a generator. there is a battery. there is also a virtual shifter which gives you a range of gearing that your bike will try to mimic. legs spin cranks, the bike tries to spin the tire as if the two were connected. It gives a pretty intuitive way to control speed way, way faster than you should be comfortable moving.
After riding a direct drive cargo bike and using a geared hubbed fat bike for a bit, neither really was quite what I had a, for lack of a better word, craving for.
The super mundo was a more appealing idea, but also kind of fell short in a few ways.
*deep breath*
Currently, my thoughts are to use a mundo(v5) frame, a 800w direct drive front hub, and a 1.2kw-ish(20amp) brushless dc motor for the mid drive (@3600rpm and a 10x reduction) With all the above operating at 60v.
The rear hub would be a nuvinci. I'm not sure about adding an internally geared front crank, but it is a possibility. according to some math, the crusing speed would be around 26mph with the numbers we had for the various ratios, and we'd only need a freewheel to connect the riders input to the motors output spindle, and I think the rear hub and center portion could potentially be directly connected without a freewheel. The gearing is to keep rider input valid to cadence between 7mph and 27mph. With a reducer crank, that goes to 3.5mph which should be enough to get anything up a hill with the motors helping that the frame will hold. The front hub is mostly to pull the bike up to 36mph and for extending the life of the brakes.
With a bit of math, in theory, I might be able to get a overall controller to handle the shifting too to keep it range appropriate, and to avoid putting over whatever the max torque the rear hub can handle automatically.
The ratios from cranks to center and center to rear are 5:1 and 1:2 I the speeds are based on a 26 inch wheel (by notes)
unless my obervations are wrong, the way it's inline with the drive drain is a lot like a tandem bike? hence the title of the topic.
the super mundo was nice, but a large rotating thing just makes me feel uncomfortable and worried my skirt will be departing being an article of clothing. this keeps everything in a chainguardable zone.
With tire pressure sensors, you also get a bit more input on how much energy will be needed for the rider and cargo, so more accurate estimates and force reductions with heavier loads. Also, 'stall warnings' if you are attempting steep climbs with heavy stuff on the bike.

...my other random thought, was 'bike by wire'. the cranks are a generator. there is a battery. there is also a virtual shifter which gives you a range of gearing that your bike will try to mimic. legs spin cranks, the bike tries to spin the tire as if the two were connected. It gives a pretty intuitive way to control speed way, way faster than you should be comfortable moving.