Great points. Buying the lightest ever motor to pair it with a heavy hub is kind of backwards.
But honestly, I only think the lightness of this drive is relevant in eMTB applications.
Otherwise, the massive battery needed for range at speed will outweigh the ligness gains anyways.
I somewhat agree.
If you just want power, I think you should buy a qs mid mount motor and get it over with.
IMO, this whole "lightest" concept is a little silly. I was a hard core road biker for many years and while never a total weight weenie I agree that a pound or 2 on a 18 pound bike that is to be human powered is a big deal. But 2 pounds difference on an e-bike that will weigh in at ~40-50 pounds (with battery) and be powered by ~1000w of motor power is trivial. IMO the $ and engineering required to trim a couple pounds off the motor could be better spent improving other aspects of the design.... or just allowing it to be sold for less $.
I don't think its silly at all and I am glad they put in the effort to keep the weight down. When I see a product that is crudely designed or non-optimized in the physical package it always makes me wonder what other corners were cut.IMO, this whole "lightest" concept is a little silly. I was a hard core road biker for many years and while never a total weight weenie I agree that a pound or 2 on a 18 pound bike that is to be human powered is a big deal. But 2 pounds difference on an e-bike that will weigh in at ~40-50 pounds (with battery) and be powered by ~1000w of motor power is trivial. IMO the $ and engineering required to trim a couple pounds off the motor could be better spent improving other aspects of the design.... or just allowing it to be sold for less $.
I would argue that the lightness of the drive is important in any type of bike other than maybe cargo. Anytime you jump a curb or lift the bike for transport you feel the weight. The light motor ALLOWs you to spend the weight somewhere else i.e. the ighGreat points. Buying the lightest ever motor to pair it with a heavy hub is kind of backwards.
But honestly, I only think the lightness of this drive is relevant in eMTB applications.
Otherwise, the massive battery needed for range at speed will outweigh the ligness gains anyways.
I don't think its silly at all and I am glad they put in the effort to keep the weight down. When I see a product that is crudely designed or non-optimized in the physical package it always makes me wonder what other corners were cut.
I don't get how the Revel drive is 25% less good. The designer just isn't interested in higher voltage and power. The design of the system itself is quite elegant.
I would say Revel is equal, and Photon is 25% lesser. You are being overly harsh on both those systems.
Why revel is 25% less good:
- Motor weight x watts indicates lower efficiency.
- Requires a 36v battery.
- Owner of the company has a very anti DIY and anti high power attitude. <-- dealbreaker
- More expensive.
650w opens up igh options, no?
I should have a new next generation em3ev 19.5ah battery in 6 business days.
I've got a laser tachometer, CA standalone, and a thermal camera. Should be able to get some data.
Maybe we can save this thread after all, IDK!
What is a "next generation" battery? Does it use anti-matter, dilithium crystals or have a warp core?.
It's nothing super pivotal, but em3ev switched to 21700 cells, added potting, and UL rated their batteries.