teslanv
1 MW
Do a search for "DC circuit breaker" 30A or 50A as appropriate for you controller.
Wishes said:The temp sensor is mostly a nice to have, not a must have. You will not overheat this motor. It is not a hub motor. You will melt wires before the actual motor over heats. You need to pump in some massive AMPs to really heat it up. Much more than most people run on this setup.
Wishes
LightningRods said:. . . If you're running it at 100V 50 amps you have so much money in controller and batteries that you can bloody well afford to get a temp sensor and a CA 3.
I believe we agreed 30 amps was good guide for max continuous right?LightningRods said:Wishes said:I agree. Only mad overvolters have any use for a temp sensor on this motor. If you're running it at 48V 30 amps it's not going to get hot. If you're running it at 100V 50 amps you have so much money in controller and batteries that you can bloody well afford to get a temp sensor and a CA 3.
If your name is Wishes or Bee and you need more power than the 84V 40 amps that this controller provides Lyen has even larger controllers
spinningmagnets said:If your name is Wishes or Bee and you need more power than the 84V 40 amps that this controller provides Lyen has even larger controllers
84V X 40A = 3360W
Christerljung made quite a splash when he successfully ran a GNG at 100V, but even with some of the upgrades he added, the drive and the bicycle components took quite a beating. He then built up a second bike for when he was in a 100V mood, and he bypassed the pedals, using only footpegs. Most of the ES builders that love 4,000W-8,000W use a hub because that much power will wear-out/break bicycle stuff...and a hub means that the pedals and chain are then only for foot power (so they will last a long time).
Of course if you use a powerful hub...it puts a lot of weight out back, and it also doesn't allow the motor to use the available gears for slow steep techincal rides. For a build that has a fairly light motor/drive thats centrally located, and gives the motor the use of the bicycle gears...nothing else on the market comes close to these performance specs, and this 12-FET 48V-84V controller is a perfect fit...
LightningRods said:I'm not sure what Lyen was doing last month. My controllers arrived with the wires properly color coded as will all future controllers for my kit. If you are concerned that yours was sent before he made this change, contact him. If you connect the phase wires and they're not in correct sequence it won't harm the motor or controller. It just won't run.
The controller that Lyen recommends for my kit is $139 + $4 for the much recommended Cycle Analyst connector. If your name is Wishes or Bee and you need more power than the 84v 40 amps that this controller provides Lyen has even larger controllers that he can also set up to plug and play with my kit.
3360W is a good limit for your drive train. You can make it last at those power levels if you are somewhat careful. Don't shift under load, when coasting spin the motor up gradually and not WOT to catchup to the wheel spin ect.... With a few simple cautions, your drive train will last. Once you take it past this 3360 level, then be prepared to replace a lot of your bicycle parts.
jk1 said:i think this power level is way too much for long term reliability when used as a mid drive with bike chain and deraileurs, for direct to the rear wheel it would be ok.
What you describe is precautions to stop a chain break or deraileur failure but this power will still mean rapid chain wear out and replacement every few hundred Km's-i.e a bad design. What i think people will be more interested in is the maximum power level a normal bike chain and chainwheels can last say 3000kms I.e their is no useing haveing 3kw of power when you need a new chain/chainwheels every 500 kms. From reading other people posts about chain wear, i think the max power should be under 2kw and then normal bike chain may last up to 3000 kms.
Any more then this power is overkill on a mid drive bike chain and expect it costly to change the bike chain, deraileur and chainwheels very often.
Skippic said:Are you considering supplying extra durable parts for the final drive or at least making research what would be suitable? I mean something like a BMX chain, with a robust single wheel at the back.