dnmun
1 PW
don't buy that Vpower battery pack.
don't buy that Vpower battery pack
nonononononononono
don't buy that Vpower battery pack
nonononononononono
dnmun said:don't buy that Vpower battery pack.
don't buy that Vpower battery pack
nonononononononono
miro13car said:Johnjapan
I would suggest you different approach
You can read and read and what?
What you need is a riding experience on several bikes
Some shout WOW riding Currie crap ebike and call it good ebike
Simple you must try the worst and the best in ebike category
you choose
johnjapan said:The simulator and the forums have given enough info for me to make an informed decision
I'm going with a 48v15ah battery, I have no idea on how to decide which motor im reasearching...
300w 500w 750w 1000w motors which one is ideal for the battery I've chosen? I'd like to also have my gears operational for normal pedaling its an interesting predicament.
lbz5mc12 said:Maybe this will help for ideas. I currently have an e-bikekit rear DD hub kit on my GT. I'm using 2 bmsbattery.com batteries. I have a 36V 20Ah and a 48V 10Ah both lithium ion. The 36V pack with shipping to the US was $390.00 and the 48V was $326.00. I got a good deal on my kit and only paid $375.00 from a local dealer. That puts me at $1,091.00 so far. I've previously owned the cheaper yescom style hub kits both 500W/800W. I got about 20 mph out of the 500 and 27 mph out of the 800. Usually if you check ebay you can find the cheaper kits with free shipping. I know a lot of the ES members boohoo the bms batteries but I've had no problems with mine. I'd have to say on my current set up I could, with moderate pedaling, get about 30 Miles out of my combined packs. My total rider + bike weight is well over 400 lbs. So if you're a skinny minny you could easily pull off 40 miles with my set up. My 36V battery puts me at 20 mph which is the legal limit in California and the 48V is more for off road at 28 mph. Currently my packs are on the back while I'm researching mid mount options. If anyone could recommend a fairly priced mid mount bag it would probably help me and John. So um yeah okay.
lbz5mc12 said:Maybe this will help for ideas. I currently have an e-bikekit rear DD hub kit on my GT. I'm using 2 bmsbattery.com batteries. I have a 36V 20Ah and a 48V 10Ah both lithium ion. The 36V pack with shipping to the US was $390.00 and the 48V was $326.00. I got a good deal on my kit and only paid $375.00 from a local dealer. That puts me at $1,091.00 so far. I've previously owned the cheaper yescom style hub kits both 500W/800W. I got about 20 mph out of the 500 and 27 mph out of the 800. Usually if you check ebay you can find the cheaper kits with free shipping. I know a lot of the ES members boohoo the bms batteries but I've had no problems with mine. I'd have to say on my current set up I could, with moderate pedaling, get about 30 Miles out of my combined packs. My total rider + bike weight is well over 400 lbs. So if you're a skinny minny you could easily pull off 40 miles with my set up. My 36V battery puts me at 20 mph which is the legal limit in California and the 48V is more for off road at 28 mph. Currently my packs are on the back while I'm researching mid mount options. If anyone could recommend a fairly priced mid mount bag it would probably help me and John. So um yeah okay.
borschelrh said:Don't forget John is living in Japan so US prices, availability, and options don't apply. He is better off buying either in Japan or from China but I don't know the customs duties issues from China to Japan. Given the current political crisis over the islands between China and Japan this may actually be a problem.
Dogman's advice is sound. Greenbikekit has some geared hub motors at attractive prices as well. I do agree a cycle analyst makes a lot of sense and I do agree limiting the controller is the wisest way to go about this. Personally, I don't like to go faster than 30 kph on a bicycle so limiting the speed is fine with me. I also pedal roughly 75% of the effort. The kit I am using has a small LCD panel mini-controller which reads the speed from a wheel sensor and the input from the pedal sensor to control the speed. It also limits the voltages. I can tell when it is set for 25 kph and I pedal a bit faster and the motor cuts out exactly how much effort is required to maintain my speed and how much I am contributing myself. This goes a long way to increase range in the flats. Hills are a different challenge and can stress the system. All of it is a trade off. I do think it wise to get a 48v system and I would shot for an 800 or higher watt motor. The windings of the motor are also important and I am no expert but I think Dogman has that figured out well. I would have gone with a geared hub motor but I ride primarily off road and this is bad for gears.
johnjapan said:i'm not sure if you're aware guys but there's a site called alibaba.com.....
.
Drunkskunk said:johnjapan said:i'm not sure if you're aware guys but there's a site called alibaba.com.....
.
Yes.. we are very aware... There are some honest people who use alibaba. BUT there is a Huge number of fraudlent listing, and scamers who use it as well. It is easy to spot some, but impossable to spot them all. We've had a few threads about the issue here. I believe one member here had their bike's picture being fraudlently used in an add for one vendor.
Basicly, you are gambling when using Alibaba, and the risk is great of losing your money.
There are better options.
For batteries, we colectivly trust Mr Ping of Ping battery. and Paul of em3ev.com for low cost but reliable quality with excilent customer service. em3ev.com would also be a safe place to get your other parts in Asia. anyone else I can recomend is in north america, so shipping would be more.
borschelrh said:John,
Sorry I didn't catch up on posts recently. There are a couple of ways to control the assist. The method my kit used and is the most common is called pedelec in which there is a magnetic sensor that mounts to the bottom bracket and measures pedal rotation. It is merely reading on or off and if you are pedaling the motor kicks in to keep the bike at a set speed which is measured using a speed sensor mounted to the wheel. This is the most common and cheapest method. A better system is to measure torque (torque sensing) and the motor assists as needed based on the torque contributed by the rider. Both seem to work but I have only used the pedelec system. I do have the option of setting the controller to a zero setting which then turns of the speed setting altogether and the motor is controlled by throttle alone. This also works well and bypasses the pedelec altogether. My LCD controller allows me to set the maximum speed at the highest of the 5 settings to 40 kph and the remaining settings are ratios (not sure exacly what they are) but with the max at 40 the minimum at setting 1 is 25 kph. If I am riding on flats or roads I use this setting. In real terms I don't ever see 40 kph but I do get 30 kph without problem. Probably if I were running at 48V I might be able to get higher speeds but as I said before I like riding at a max of 25 kph and it gets better range and is not so rough on the wheels. I have been riding a lot lately and I still haven't depleted the battery more than 1/2 even riding 60 kilometers. But, I am doing most of the pedaling. I do notice that there is appreciable motor sag when the battery is at 1/2 capacity when I am going up hills so perhaps I am closer to the limits of the battery than I think. Without a Cycle Analyst I can't really say for sure and I am not eager to spend $200 here in Europe to get one. I may order one from the US if one of my relatives comes this Summer.
I would look at TaoBao if you aren't going to use one of the recommended sellers. Google does a pretty good job translating the Chinese and Mr Tao seems to be okay for the actual purchases but again, I haven't needed to try it yet. I would look very hard inside Japan and see if there are some reasonable sellers. I did this in Europe and finally found the Czech site who don't gouge their customers. Prices here in Hungary are ridiculous but I found a guy in Italy that is reasonable and another in France as well. The Czechs were the lowest price and I am satisfied.