John in CR
100 TW
Fanciful imagination??? Your ridiculous refusal to understand such a simple concept is astounding. The thing I have a real problem with is that it turns into erroneous advice, and that's why people burn up motors since they have no idea of the real current limits. I've never burned one up, despite for 12yrs having higher performance than virtually anyone on the forum, and climbing steeper hills hauling heavier loads, and doing that all at a cheaper cost than the vast majority.
A 3 turn motor will meet the needs of the overwhelming majority using the common voltage range of 24-48 volts, and throw in 72V for the guys wanting really high top speed. I begrudgingly added the 6t as an option just for those who want to go really slow and 24V is still too fast. That would result in widely know current limits, not an unknown current limit for every different wind, which would mean the end of burned up motors.
FYI, the DD hubbies I started with in 2008 were from the factory that holds the Chinese patent for the now so common 46 magnet 51 slot motor (like Leaf, MXUS, 9 Continents, etc), and they sold exactly 1 motor winding, a 2 turn, which is a bit too hard on cheap controllers due to the low inductance. The resulting Kv is also a bit too high even at 24V for those wanting to go slow without running a tiny wheel. With a $125 combo including motor, controller, moto rim, and DC/DC converter, I was climbing mountain roads just as efficiently as your slow wind, while carrying heavier loads and probably enjoying better acceleration. The real limiting factor back then was controllers, and there's a lot more better bargain controllers available now. Just don't try driving a heavy DD hubbie with a controller meant for a crappy little geared hubbie.
A 3 turn motor will meet the needs of the overwhelming majority using the common voltage range of 24-48 volts, and throw in 72V for the guys wanting really high top speed. I begrudgingly added the 6t as an option just for those who want to go really slow and 24V is still too fast. That would result in widely know current limits, not an unknown current limit for every different wind, which would mean the end of burned up motors.
FYI, the DD hubbies I started with in 2008 were from the factory that holds the Chinese patent for the now so common 46 magnet 51 slot motor (like Leaf, MXUS, 9 Continents, etc), and they sold exactly 1 motor winding, a 2 turn, which is a bit too hard on cheap controllers due to the low inductance. The resulting Kv is also a bit too high even at 24V for those wanting to go slow without running a tiny wheel. With a $125 combo including motor, controller, moto rim, and DC/DC converter, I was climbing mountain roads just as efficiently as your slow wind, while carrying heavier loads and probably enjoying better acceleration. The real limiting factor back then was controllers, and there's a lot more better bargain controllers available now. Just don't try driving a heavy DD hubbie with a controller meant for a crappy little geared hubbie.