dogman said:
Here's my 2 cents.
Definitely mount the controller on the bike, so you don't have to unplug anything but the battery itself. That will help some.
Done-ish. The battery still sits under the controller, so it is a pain to pack/unpack, but it is definitely better. When I get time, I'm going to make a custom front low rider pannier bag rack for the fork. I mocked it up tonight, and it is going to be ultra stealthy. Some of you guys will like this a lot

The panniers will cover the hub and wiring, and contain everything but the throttle, which will be wired to trace the front brake cable housing. Battery in the big pannier pouch, controller and wiring in the small one. Pannier on the other side for my lunch and a thermos, or whatever.
dogman said:
Get a wattmeter. Voltage alone is not as good a way to monitor lifepo4. Once you are familiar with what your total real world avaliable ah is, you can then monitor by both voltage and by ah used.
Done. Though I've been using the ah for a full charge as my power consumption meter to get a handle on the battery performance. Looks like my "4.4 ah" batteries are more like 3.8 ah. I had been counting on using 3.6 ah from the 4.4 ah pack, and my estimates were good, that's what I need. Maybe a 2s booster pack, for a 16% increase in wh to get me to 80% DoD on a commute roundtrip?
So far, the watt meter has told me:
15w-35w with the wheel in the air, full throttle, halls hooked up. 40w, wheel in the air, halls disconnected. Temperature was about 0F, so there was probably substantial grease drag in those numbers.
15 amps at very low speed without pedaling. How is it that the shunt doesn't prevent this high amp rate at low rpm?
11.5 amps at moderate speed full throttle, with pack voltage sagging to 38.2v. I guess I didn't shave much off the shunt at all...
8 amps at cruising speed, wide open with nominal pedaling (I was aiming for equal or less than I will do when my knee hurts). Maybe I did shave some off the shunt :?
dogman said:
Ride farther, that way you get more out of each setup procedure.

Take the fun cut home, instead of the short way.
I'm using this thing every trip while it is the new toy, and I'm still figuring it out. The plan was to take the long way whenever possible and make up the extra wh with my legs so to speak, but have the assist for the short way, when my knees are bothering me, or when I would be tempted to use a car to get their quicker. I know you were kidding, but seriously, too much futzing around, and it isn't worth it. I'm probably not a good candidate for an ebike in that I live so close to work that on the surface, there is little point in the assist.