safe
1 GW
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2006
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- 5,681
fechter said:If you know the limitations of your motor, you can prevent it from getting too hot in the first place by controlling the throttle and avoiding the inefficient operating zone.
There are a lot of things that the "perfect throttle user" can do. But in a sense what a controller is supposed to do is to act out what would be the ideal throttle usage. The only control mechanism is the duty cycle... so it just seems to me that if it can be proven (which it can) that the peak power of a motor is found at a relatively high rpm and that high rpm represents the maximum heat production that the motor can safely allow (sort of like the "rated load" however pushing the limit a little closer to the real edge rather than the safer edge of heat that they publish) then if you can downshift your way or upshift your way into that perfect rpm all the time then you can't improve on that. All the potentially harmful (from a heat perspective) torque that you might have at your disposal is only going to count as a negative in comparison to proper gear usage.
As a guy with a geared electric bike I simply laugh sometimes at the very idea of riding around on a fixed geared bike. (it seems that so much of the psychology is bound to the fixed gear mindset) Once you have a geared bike you will never look back to a fixed gear in the same way. I just don't spend more than a few seconds in each gear (except on long uphills of course) as I accelerate and decelerate around town. To the geared bike user heat is a matter of gearing and NOT throttle control.



The "ideal" controller needs to help the user know when to select the right gear. That's the only thing that is really important if you think deeply about it... if you are in the right gear then the controller really needs to be nothing but an "on" switch... just let the battery flow to the motor because everything is going great in that situation.
Fechter, you ought to have a geared bike of your own as well as your fixed motor machine. It will open up a whole new world to you on the pragmatic usage of such a thing. Until you make a habit of it you just won't have the "feel" of it in the back of your mind. People who own multiple speed electric bikes can imagine what a fixed gear would be like, but the reverse is not true.