Zorroavelo said:Very interested by both Mac and Mxusxf19 i hesitate and finnaly bought a Mxusxf15r for the same price than the xf19 or close. Good motor to me (my first build) but it miss some power to me. Now i project to buy a mac or a little dd motor but i'm very curious about the potential of this xf19r. Knowing what is the best controller for example
Tommm said:Zorroavelo said:Very interested by both Mac and Mxusxf19 i hesitate and finnaly bought a Mxusxf15r for the same price than the xf19 or close. Good motor to me (my first build) but it miss some power to me. Now i project to buy a mac or a little dd motor but i'm very curious about the potential of this xf19r. Knowing what is the best controller for example
40-43 battery amps I would say is the limit, you can bump up the voltage higher, to 72v, so you will get about 3000w.
Hawaiianr808 said:Tommm said:Zorroavelo said:Very interested by both Mac and Mxusxf19 i hesitate and finnaly bought a Mxusxf15r for the same price than the xf19 or close. Good motor to me (my first build) but it miss some power to me. Now i project to buy a mac or a little dd motor but i'm very curious about the potential of this xf19r. Knowing what is the best controller for example
40-43 battery amps I would say is the limit, you can bump up the voltage higher, to 72v, so you will get about 3000w.
Which motor?
1boris said:The motor was very cheap 104 usd and 67 usd for shipping to Norway
Tommm said:Zorroavelo said:Very interested by both Mac and Mxusxf19 i hesitate and finnaly bought a Mxusxf15r for the same price than the xf19 or close. Good motor to me (my first build) but it miss some power to me. Now i project to buy a mac or a little dd motor but i'm very curious about the potential of this xf19r. Knowing what is the best controller for example
40-43 battery amps I would say is the limit, you can bump up the voltage higher, to 72v, so you will get about 3000w.
powrtrip said:Thought I'd add my 2 cents.
Been running the xf19's as my new favorites. I am a builder in Boston area.
I run them on 48 volt KT controller 12 mosfet, I cut the cable at the axle exit and replace it with
Grin Cable with the 12g. phase and 7 control wires.
I did that because they easily take 2200 watt bursts and seem to run better and not hot hot cable to deal with.
The small section from end of axle to windings also stays warm at worst.
I stopped doing BBSHD builds in favor of these. A nice light K2 or Jamis frame and they pop wheelies and fly.
So far I got 6 MTB builds out there mostly with hunters, one guy who runs trails.
KT setting C1 I think, raise it up to 90 and that opens the gate.
I do cap the current to about 1600 watts for customers....
Do they rate them as the same wheel speed (in same size wheel) at that voltage? If so, there isn't an RPM difference.Kajman said:Guys, anyone have idea of rpm difference between 36v and 48v version? Nice motor anyway.
Did you buy the stock XF19r with no special winding? Does report speed at while coasting? Is there a temperature sensor? How are they still doing?Thought I'd add my 2 cents.
Been running the xf19's as my new favorites. I am a builder in Boston area.
I run them on 48 volt KT controller 12 mosfet, I cut the cable at the axle exit and replace it with
Grin Cable with the 12g. phase and 7 control wires.
I did that because they easily take 2200 watt bursts and seem to run better and not hot hot cable to deal with.
The small section from end of axle to windings also stays warm at worst.
I stopped doing BBSHD builds in favor of these. A nice light K2 or Jamis frame and they pop wheelies and fly.
So far I got 6 MTB builds out there mostly with hunters, one guy who runs trails.
KT setting C1 I think, raise it up to 90 and that opens the gate.
I do cap the current to about 1600 watts for customers....
No one is reporting speeds?? I'm wondering what speed it gets at 60v 40a and how easy it is to pedal vs a bbshd
That is disappointing. The only geared hub motor that I know of that does high speed continuously is the one on the Wired Freedom fat bike but I want something for a MTB wheel.To go high speed you have to fight two things:
- Controller eRPM limits, IE you need a specialized controller for this motor.
- The motor's low efficiency relative to a MAC or DD prevents you from running those high speeds for a long period of time, even if you achieve them.
You want high continuous speed? look anywhere other than at this motor.
I would assume the motor has a freewheel and there shouldn't be any significant drag while pedaling.
37-40mphWhat's your definition of high speed?
would statorade help?That is disappointing. The only geared hub motor that I know of that does high speed continuously is the one on the Wired Freedom fat bike but I want something for a MTB wheel.
I hesitated for a while between MAC/GMAC and mxus xf19. I finnally choosed the mxus because of the price, the biggest reduction ratio and the disponibility at that time... The mac was rare and hard to find at a good price and the mxus was only 200 dollars with shipping. I don't regret it but i think i made some mistakes like accelerating with throttle when the controller i've used was running the motor backward. After that i understood the concept of self learning on this controller(JRAHK controller). After using it with 72v and 60amp i have now a noise with the clutch. I'm talking to some sellers to find copper gears but i only found steel gears. I would prefer non ferric metal because of the coils and magnet... My finnal goal is to use ATX oil to keep it not too warm, i will probably weld the clutch or buy a "no clutch" planetary reduction if it exist.Statorade doesn't work for geared motors because it can't help you get the heat inside the case to the outside of the case.
An ATF ( or other fluid ) fill that drips everywhere is your best bet for improving this efficiency/thermally challenged motor. Most people don't like that.
If you like this motor and want more power, try a MAC or GMAC.. those have higher efficiency stators and therefore don't make as much internal heat, so you can flog them longer![]()