August 25th 2011
What I'm starting with
Just bought this Novara Method 1.0 frame, and it came with seat post, headset, and RockShox Ario 2.2 Shock.
August 28th 2011
Controller Mounted
Held on via velcro and zip ties. Placed so that the rear swing arm can compress fully without hitting the controller. Enabled m2 (low power mod) and regen on generic controller. Sweet!
Battery brackets
Two of these brackets will be used to hold all the batteries inside the triangle. Right now, each one weighs about 600g. I'm hoping to drop them down to under 400g each, so only add 800g from brackets total, rather than 1200g. I'll do so by drilling many more holes into them, as they are extremely stiff right now and way too bulky.
August 29th 2011
Battery Mount Welded
Managed to drop each bar down almost 200g to through sanding slits into it (pain in the butt). Total weight of battery mount ~840g vs original ~1200g+
Primered and spray painted silver (though it won't be seen after the cover is made, which will also be painted this color to match the bike frame.
September 5 2011
Packs permanently paralleled
Now I can connect the 4mm bullets in series without extra wiring. I can also choose to bulk charge or charge packs 2x2 as I don't have to deal with andersons.
Battery Mounts completed
20s2p configuration complete, 83v hot off the charge, with 10ah worth of fun. After paralleling the packs, I've simply connected the 4mm bullet connectors together to create the 20s configuration. A battery cover is in the works after all the wiring gets done. Credits to metallover for the mounting bracket idea.
September 6 2011
Front Fork Installed
100mm of travel with preload adjustment. Yes the front wheels are 26" and the rear is 24". Combine that with wide tires in the front and skinny tires on the back and you see the huge difference in size. Need to find a really short stem to clamp onto the steerer tube rather than the current one. Got about 20mm to play with and right now the ghetto stem leaves room inside the tube without the star nut in place. Need recommendations for a short stem (I hear BMX stems are usually low profile and shorter). Also going to take the front fork off soon to repaint them the color of the frame.
September 7 2011
Battery Cover Mockup
Final cover will be made from abs plastic, paint matched to frame and secured with bolts on one side, and velcro for easy access on the other side. The cover doesn't "cover" the rear shock, because I'd like to be able to use the lockout function at any time.
September 10 2011
Today I got the chance to paint the front forks, install both front and rear brakes (still need cabling and brake lever for rear), wire up battery key switch, and install bottom bracket to the bike. I also got the time to wire up the throttle and ignition switch. The best part of the day has to be when I was testing regen and low power mod, a wire slipped and caused a short, blew a couple of fets.
September 15 2011
Got a lot done today! Installed pedals, chains, rear brakes, and cruise/low power/headlight switches. Took it for a spin at 11pm with 45 degree weather and 25mph winds, in the middle of september too o_0 AMAZING, simply amazing what difference there is between a real full suspension bike and a full suspension bike from walmart. Never going back.. just wow.
September 20 2011
Installed rear fenders. Got a threadless bike stem so now the handlebars don't sit at shoulder height haha The ride quality is great after I adjusted the air in the rear shock. Bike is close to completion!
September 23 2011
Battery Cover Mold
This is the basic shape of my cover, which I will put over the bike and use as a mold for a fiberglass (I'm hoping) cover. If not, it will be made from a single sheet of acrylic or lexan (suggestions?) and heat bent into shape. Pros of fiberglass is shinier and easier to create odd shapes, cons is time and effort spent for a cover. Pros of acrylic/lexan is less time, relatively easy to bend, cons is hard to cut into odd shapes and won't be as rigid if I want to keep it less than or around 1/8th" thick.
Here's how it looks on the bike as a mockup (ignoring the piece of tape on the cardboard, and imagining it as silver, I think it would look pretty nice):
September 26 2011
Cycle Analyst!
Haven't hooked it up yet but it's the next thing I'm doing!
September 30 2011
Battery Cover Done
Painted it silver after this picture. Looks pretty cool like this, though I wouldn't wanna ride around looking like I've got a bomb strapped to my bike lol
October 18 2011
Ready to test
Bike is all set up ready to run. Controller now mounted in triangle, wires tidied up. Decided to scrap the battery in triangle idea. Last thing to do is wait for the battery backpack and then I'm off to go test the bike. Still need torque arms though, which should've been first order of business but has been pushed to last, even behind cst cyclops tires which are in the mail on the way.
Plug for battery is run down the upper tube under the rear seat for the final look of the bike to be stealth.
October 21 2011
First ride
I used the bike today with my regular backpack holding the batteries. Running only 74v, and this thing is just beautiful to ride. The ride is so comfortable, and I have the power when I need it, yet I only travel maybe 25mph tops on these local roads. People in cars keep looking at me wondering what the heck is going on
Here's what my handlebars look like, minimalist approach:
And also a side profile shot.
My last thing that I have to do is torque arms, its riding fine without it right now, but I'd like to be able to full throttle starting from rest without worrying about getting sent to the ER

I'd also like to put a seat post rear rack so that I don't have to always have the batteries on my back. Putting 5ah on there will not be too heavy (though I doubt it couldn't hold 10ah or even 15ah worth of lipo). This will help with easy getting on and off the bike. Having the battery strapped to your back and getting on the bike is one hard thing to do, especially with this being a large frame and getting over the top tube is difficult as it is.
Videos and photos in next post!