heliolatrix
10 W
yes, and I should have also waited for this other thread to take off. http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=58965
For high torque at low speeds you'll need a motor and controller that can allow high amps at low speed. If you get a programmable controller you can limit the power to legal levels.heliolatrix said:Unfortunately I do not know much about motors.
Does anyone know if there are any E-teck type motors still made? looks like they are all way too powerful...
heliolatrix said:Is there a way to rewire a hub motor so there is more toque?
May be use thinker wires?? with a new thicker axle?
I saw this video and do not think it could be done on hub motor
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9CLtlkl6fM
My desire is to be able to drive about 400 lbs up a 9 percent grade, at less than 20 mph. And not use gears, cogs or pulleys.
heliolatrix said:no motor chosen yet.... I got he idea from the video that just adding more coils will make it slower and give it more torque, correct?
I think the crystal light may be the strongest... is it possible to make it stronger?
Only if you can pack in more copper than the original wind has.heliolatrix said:Is there a way to rewire a hub motor so there is more toque?
heliolatrix said:How would I keep it form over heating? I do not want to take a chance of burning out an expensive motor or controller.
Do not look videos on you tube, this guy definitively does not know what he is doing. I have not analyzed his efforts, but I believe he will kill commutator or brushes right away, they see 0V in every switch unlike original winding just 1 coil V difference per switch. So, this guy assumed well at end, they where smarter people designing this motor. Conclusion, just stick to original design and you did well starting tread at this forum. Chromotor is quite torquy with right controller, wide and big D stator = torque.heliolatrix said:I saw this video and do not think it could be done on hub motor
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9CLtlkl6fM
I have two 9C 2806 hubs mounted front and rear and it is plenty fast (> 40 mph top speed, cruise ~30 mph) + it climbs hills with ease. Probably a lot cheaper to set up over building a new single torquey motor from scratch.lbz5mc12 said:You could always just use 2 low speed hub kits on your bike. Front and rear. Have 2 separate throttles that way you can use either or, or both at the same time. I use 2 kits on my bike and I alone weigh about 305 lbs. My motors get me uphill at about 20 mph or more depending on the grade.
Kingfish said:Maybe we should restate the goal:
Is it that you want motorcycle-carrying capacity, just at (relatively) slow speed?