Chalo said:Oh boy. A hydraulically shifted Rohloff hub. Because Rohloff hubs have had such a lot of trouble shifting. Wait, um....
TorEddy said:How do you know Kindernay copied Rohloffs gearbox layout? I happen to know that Kindernays internals are an industrial secret as they have a very clever way of combining the planetary reductions with clutches.
Bullfrog said:TorEddy...now that is one nice looking bike/build and I agree with your comment about the build being as much fun as riding.
All this talk about shifting...I don't shift at all. 99% of my riding is off road so that is a factor that you have to take into account. Since an electric motor produces max torque at zero rpms, it works great with a single speed bike. I gear mine so that the top speed is about 18 mph. That has worked out to be the fastest I can go in the tight single track where I ride without having trees jump out in front of me. The Surly Singleator and a White Industries freewheel give me a chain tensioner and 72 engagement points. I run a 28 tooth Lekkie chainring or a Luna 30 tooth Mighty Mini on the front...the small chainring helps me get the gearing I want and it also moves the chain/sprocket interface away from my pants leg...a little bit.
One of my bikes that I use for multiple purposes, I did take a seven speed freewheel and remove/rearrange the gears so that it is now a three speed. One gear for "trials" type riding with a top speed of 10 mph, one gear for single track with a top speed of 18 mph, and one gear for the pavement with a top speed of 28 mph.
I am particularly interested in your battery mounting scheme...I have a Diamondback "Catch" full suspension bike I want to put a BBSHD on and the only thing holding me back is where and how to mount the battery. The 3D printed adapter looks like something I need to try. Just FYI, EM3ev is my "go to" for batteries. They recently added a 14s4p and a 14s5p pack that is pretty small and uses a smart BMS that balances the cells at all charge levels/voltages and you can check on it via bluetooth...if I had a bluetooth but all of my teeth are white :lol: . The 30Q cells are the way to go for higher amperage and the 4p pack is rated to supply 30A continuously...it can actually do a good bit more. EM3ev tends to under rate their batteries...then when you get more than what they said, the customers are happy. Most other battery suppliers over rate their batteries and you are lucky to get anywhere close to their claims.
A nice clean way to get more power out of your BBSHD is a LUNA Ludicrous controller. I can supply up to 60A although I wouldn't recommend going over 50A if you want the nyon/plastic gear to last (based on what I have read). I am very impressed with mine and I haven't gone over 50A...yet. It keeps everything internal and protected and is visually much cleaner looking than an external controller. A Sine wave controller may not be the best idea...IMO you should go "Trapezoidal" or "FOC". Check out this article and if you want to skip to the meat of the article, check out "table 2"...page five, middle of the right hand column: https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/40ac/06d3db0b82242038c2dcd20c433d5d1c74f6.pdf.
TOLM said:I tried to buy the ludicrous controller from luna. They would not sell it to me. Explained that bbshd is simply not torquey enough for me but they did not care. Sold my bbshd and bought cyclone insted (way more torque)
Bullfrog said:I don't have any personal experience with them but the Lightning Rod (small block and big block) appear to be a well designed set up. I have communicated with the owner a few times and he seems pretty sharp as well as helpful.
If I wanted more power than my BBSHD can deliver, I'd take a serious look at the Lightning Rods: http://lightning-rods10.mybigcommerce.com/lightning-rods-small-block-mid-drive/
Of course if power is all you want, QS makes some pretty big and powerful motors (as do a few other companies)....and EM3ev is supposed to start offering some of the QS options.
Bullfrog said:TorEddy...now that is one nice looking bike/build and I agree with your comment about the build being as much fun as riding.
All this talk about shifting...I don't shift at all. 99% of my riding is off road so that is a factor that you have to take into account. Since an electric motor produces max torque at zero rpms, it works great with a single speed bike. I gear mine so that the top speed is about 18 mph. That has worked out to be the fastest I can go in the tight single track where I ride without having trees jump out in front of me. The Surly Singleator and a White Industries freewheel give me a chain tensioner and 72 engagement points. I run a 28 tooth Lekkie chainring or a Luna 30 tooth Mighty Mini on the front...the small chainring helps me get the gearing I want and it also moves the chain/sprocket interface away from my pants leg...a little bit.
One of my bikes that I use for multiple purposes, I did take a seven speed freewheel and remove/rearrange the gears so that it is now a three speed. One gear for "trials" type riding with a top speed of 10 mph, one gear for single track with a top speed of 18 mph, and one gear for the pavement with a top speed of 28 mph.
I am particularly interested in your battery mounting scheme...I have a Diamondback "Catch" full suspension bike I want to put a BBSHD on and the only thing holding me back is where and how to mount the battery. The 3D printed adapter looks like something I need to try. Just FYI, EM3ev is my "go to" for batteries. They recently added a 14s4p and a 14s5p pack that is pretty small and uses a smart BMS that balances the cells at all charge levels/voltages and you can check on it via bluetooth...if I had a bluetooth but all of my teeth are white :lol: . The 30Q cells are the way to go for higher amperage and the 4p pack is rated to supply 30A continuously...it can actually do a good bit more. EM3ev tends to under rate their batteries...then when you get more than what they said, the customers are happy. Most other battery suppliers over rate their batteries and you are lucky to get anywhere close to their claims.
A nice clean way to get more power out of your BBSHD is a LUNA Ludicrous controller. I can supply up to 60A although I wouldn't recommend going over 50A if you want the nyon/plastic gear to last (based on what I have read). I am very impressed with mine and I haven't gone over 50A...yet. It keeps everything internal and protected and is visually much cleaner looking than an external controller. A Sine wave controller may not be the best idea...IMO you should go "Trapezoidal" or "FOC". Check out this article and if you want to skip to the meat of the article, check out "table 2"...page five, middle of the right hand column: https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/40ac/06d3db0b82242038c2dcd20c433d5d1c74f6.pdf.
That is so cool to hearHeck, the new bike and the old bike are both probably in the top ten bikes I have ever seen :lol:
mnahem said:Hi TorEddy,
Im putting together my first ebike with a bbshd and 52v Jumbo Shark on a Giant Stance 2. My battery wont fit with my bike's suspension, and I want to mount my battery on the underside of the downtube using modified hoseclamps from Kings Cage. I think I see 3 hoseclamps on your build, can you tell me about your mounting process, how its endured, things you might do differently?
Thank you for your time!
TorEddy said:I'm starting off with the most recent picture of my build:
![]()