amberwolf said:What are you going to use to read the sensor?
That determines which sensor you need, and which version of the sensor to use, and how to wire it. (for instance, most devices use the sensor wired from ground to the signal input, but some use it from a power source to the signal input...if the sensor is wired inside the motor from hall 5v to signal input then it can't be used on a device that needs it to be from ground to the signal input, and vice-versa).
BTW, if you get the NTC-10K, you also have to specify what Beta value to use--there are many, and each one makes for a different set of readings for the same temperature range, so using the wrong beta version for the device you're reading it with will mean your readings are wrong.
You will want to check first, and verify which specific sensor(s) it supports, to be sure you get correct readings from it.gobi said:Reading:
I am assuming my controller can read that off the motor.
There are several standards, which more or less means there isn't a standard. Certain motor companies tend to use certain specific sensors. Certain controller companies tend to support certain specific sensors. Whether these match each other depends more on luck than standards. It's even happened where systems bought as kits from various sites had sensor in motor different from what controller supported, so temperature readings were wrong.Beta: How do we ready factory temp sensors packed in other motors? Are there standards around this?
You can ask them for anything...but what they will actually do, I don't know.Meaning, Can I ask leaf to put in a NTC-10k with xyz Beta value?
Mine came with the former. I replaced it with the latter to be compatible with my Cycle Analyst.gobi said:temp sensor
I asked leaf and they emailed me 2 options:
KTY84-130 or NTC-10K
which one should I pick and why?
amberwolf said:but assuming it's still a 10k NTC you can calculate the beta it actually has from the resistances it reads at different temperatures (some websites out there show how).
E-HP said:Mine came with the former. I replaced it with the latter to be compatible with my Cycle Analyst.gobi said:temp sensor
I asked leaf and they emailed me 2 options:
KTY84-130 or NTC-10K
which one should I pick and why?
rockzzstud said:I sent an email asking leafmotor about getting a stator with another turn on it.. i just have to know how she rolls on 72v!
ZeroEm said:Have been running 72V, 40a on my 1500w leaf for years. Did not mod the wires. It's a 7T in a 26" wheel so only 33 mph top speed so does not pull a lot of amps. They come setup for 40a so would not worry unless pulling 60+ amps.
So a better motor won't get me less wattage draw at x mph. I figured 1500 watts for 29mph was pretty bad. Ebikeling used to have leaf bike hub motor clones and I was seeing almost the same speeds as I am now at 60volts at 45 battery amps as I was on 52volt 30 battery amps from controller with more voltage sag than I currently have now and I was seeing 31-35 mph with only a max of 1560 continuous battery amps availible. I have increased my voltage by 12 volts, increase battery amps by 15 but I am only seeing a 2 mph increase for a 1230 watt continuous increase on violimart motors vs what I got from ebikeling 5 turn rate 1500w motors. I don't have my old equipment but I suspect voilmart motors are really inefficient even with it being 35mm. Or the motor has a unsuttible turn rate for 26 inch wheels. I should be seeing 39-41 mph at these specs.@boytitan at the speeds you are running, this:
If they start making them like this, I may end up ordering 2 more of them. One for the custom build, another for my Milan SL. The current 3T Leafbike can already do around 2 kW continuous at 72V. Mine is in a 20" sized wheel.I think the 0.27mm laminations will broaden the efficiency curve and certainly improve efficiency at high speeds.
I would expect that the motor will have a legitimate rating of 2kw continuous and also have lower drag with these lams.
20 inch wheels would benefit the most and probably achieve stupid levels of efficiency/power, maybe something akin to 2.3kw continuous would be possible![]()
Field weakening is eating into your efficiency but numbers like those remind me of the old 0.5mm lamination hub motors. I distinctly remember using ~3000W to hit 40mph on those..My wattage per mile is abysmal btw. I was at 2300 watts continuous today getting 34mph. At 1500watts its 29mph
If they start making them like this, I may end up ordering 2 more of them. One for the custom build, another for my Milan SL. The current 3T Leafbike can already do around 2 kW continuous at 72V. Mine is in a 20" sized wheel.
Hopefully Grin starts making a faster wind version of their all-axle motor that is closely matched to this Leafbike. I have in mind making something with all wheel drive running 180V with a PowerVelocity controller to each run by a pack of Molicel P42A cells. Should this ever come to fruition, it will be time to go trolling for Dodge Charger Hellcats, Corvettes, Ferraris, and Teslas.
I have the 35mm variants. A 4T in a 26" wheel with a 7-speed cassette and a 3T in a 20" with a 7-speed freewheel.Is that the 30mm wide one? If so, that's more impressive than i thought!
Totally agree about the faster windings!!!