Kabbage
100 W
Well, it's been 13 months since I broke my humerous falling off a skateboard, and so unable to ride the bike - I went in for surgery last week to have the arm 'mended' and they got around to looking at the X-Ray and saying 'well hell, it looks like it is acutally healing now - so no surgery for you'.
So I'm back commuting on the Avanti! How much better is that than the train? Lots, let me tell you.
Anyway, also time to start bike No. 2, to try a few new things, relative to the Avanti.
This time I'm starting with a 700c commuter, a Scott Sub...

Mine's a sort of Sub20/30 bastard child made with leftover parts, apparently, but that's fine, it's got hydraulic discs which is nice, but I mainly got it because it's a really nice matt black. Always wanted a matt back bike ever since Robocop...
It actually had some ridiculous bright orange rims on it (which I suspect is one reason they were selling it cheap - no one else wanted it) - the number of spokes didn't match the motor, so I've had both wheels re-shod into some black Mavic 700C rims with black spokes.
Ahh, the motor! Actually, Kepler's recent weight weenie Super Commuter build got me thinking about downsizing the motor as much as possible, so I got a little 250W Bafang SWXH geared motor from BenMoore.
I'll be running it off a 48V 10Ah custom Headway 38120 battery pack (more on that later!), which I plan to build long and thin like Full-throttle's, to put it 'in the triangle', but without using one of them fugly bags. It will be running through a 20A controller at about 750W or so, I guess.
In keeping with my 3-speed setup on the Avanti, I've decided to remove the rear derailer and controls, and go singlespeed on the rear, with the three chainrings providing gearing up front. I had got a nice Paul Melvin chain tensioner to replace the derailer, but it's turned out to not have enough dimensional flexibility, shall we say, to enable a reasonable chainline. More on that once I get the bike for real this week, hopefully.
Ok, back to the battery; These suckers arrived from evassemble today;
View attachment 2

So now all I've got to do is build it. As I said above, planning a long skinny battery like Full-throttle's. So it's 16S in four rows of four, joined like this....
So here's my first question... What's the best way to join these together in a space-effective manner? Is it possible to join with a short section of flexible wire soldered to the ends of the batteries? (I deliberately got the batteries without the screw fittings). Or is it possible to put in some sort of copper joiner, and then squeeze some solder in from the edge? (sounds like fun...).
Thoughts?
So I'm back commuting on the Avanti! How much better is that than the train? Lots, let me tell you.
Anyway, also time to start bike No. 2, to try a few new things, relative to the Avanti.
This time I'm starting with a 700c commuter, a Scott Sub...

Mine's a sort of Sub20/30 bastard child made with leftover parts, apparently, but that's fine, it's got hydraulic discs which is nice, but I mainly got it because it's a really nice matt black. Always wanted a matt back bike ever since Robocop...
It actually had some ridiculous bright orange rims on it (which I suspect is one reason they were selling it cheap - no one else wanted it) - the number of spokes didn't match the motor, so I've had both wheels re-shod into some black Mavic 700C rims with black spokes.
Ahh, the motor! Actually, Kepler's recent weight weenie Super Commuter build got me thinking about downsizing the motor as much as possible, so I got a little 250W Bafang SWXH geared motor from BenMoore.
I'll be running it off a 48V 10Ah custom Headway 38120 battery pack (more on that later!), which I plan to build long and thin like Full-throttle's, to put it 'in the triangle', but without using one of them fugly bags. It will be running through a 20A controller at about 750W or so, I guess.
In keeping with my 3-speed setup on the Avanti, I've decided to remove the rear derailer and controls, and go singlespeed on the rear, with the three chainrings providing gearing up front. I had got a nice Paul Melvin chain tensioner to replace the derailer, but it's turned out to not have enough dimensional flexibility, shall we say, to enable a reasonable chainline. More on that once I get the bike for real this week, hopefully.
Ok, back to the battery; These suckers arrived from evassemble today;
View attachment 2

So now all I've got to do is build it. As I said above, planning a long skinny battery like Full-throttle's. So it's 16S in four rows of four, joined like this....
So here's my first question... What's the best way to join these together in a space-effective manner? Is it possible to join with a short section of flexible wire soldered to the ends of the batteries? (I deliberately got the batteries without the screw fittings). Or is it possible to put in some sort of copper joiner, and then squeeze some solder in from the edge? (sounds like fun...).
Thoughts?