Mine has a maximum speed rating of 4000 rpm. I'm pretty sure it's the same rotor.fechter said:I wonder what the maximum rpm is? If the magnets are only held on with glue, they will tend to fly off at high speed.
Mine has a maximum speed rating of 4000 rpm. I'm pretty sure it's the same rotor.fechter said:I wonder what the maximum rpm is? If the magnets are only held on with glue, they will tend to fly off at high speed.
NE-600 Dimension(height*shaft*diameter): 79*62*178mm
I've moved your thread to the Non-hub Motor Drives section, JimJim615 said:I posted a mid drive opinion question in the E-Bike General Discussion section. Being a complete newbe I should have posted it here. I am interested in just such a kit. Can my post be moved or duplicated here?
Unvented, at 1800rpm, with less than 68mm case length and for $185? Feel free to point them out....toolman2 said:at 1-1.5kw max continuous output i would expect to find many cheap motors well under 1kg.
80t #219 sprocket is 200mm (8 inches) diameter.
16t to 80t gives 5:1
Miles said:toolman2 wrote:
at 1-1.5kw max continuous output i would expect to find many cheap motors well under 1kg.
Unvented, at 1800rpm, with less than 68mm case length and for $185? Feel free to point them out....
But:
At the rated speed of 450rpm the fundamental frequency is only 45Hz, so not much incentive for them to use thin laminations....
There's a lot of unproductive copper in those endturns.... The short stack versions won't be very efficient.
Miles said:Unvented, at 1800rpm, with less than 68mm case length and for $185? Feel free to point them out....toolman2 said:at 1-1.5kw max continuous output i would expect to find many cheap motors well under 1kg.
But:
At the rated speed of 450rpm the fundamental frequency is only 45Hz, so not much incentive for them to use thin laminations....
There's a lot of unproductive copper in those endturns.... The short stack versions won't be very efficient.
http://www.hobbyking.com/hobbyking/stor ... Motor.html
-not a bad contender? 58mm case length and $108, rated for 2960w at 7000rpm (crap i know), proly better suited to 1kw at 1800rpm rather than 1.5kw, but there are also countless size choices upwards of this one.
Miles said:For:
I'm working on a 5" inrunner design.....
Miles said:Against:
- Heavy.
- Not very efficient.
crossbreak said:I don't know how it could be less heavy. There's not much material one could remove besides the rotor. Since the seem to use car alternator stator sheets, they should be thin enough to gain efficiency ratios in the 90's.