minde28383 said:Exactly how it is. Fast wounded hubs needs lots of amps to achieve similar thrust, also small diameter light wheel helps too.
Mostly folks have Kelly's Sabvotons or some similar cheaper controllers in 80-150 amps range. Also batteries in frames mostly are 18650 in 100 - 300pcs which have certain limits. Depending on cells and controller, most frequently they will find that slow wounded motor accelerates more dynamically with max power they can feed that hub ie might be what most are after. And this is more a rule than exception. Nevertheless all hubs are ok. There are compromises everywhere.
Exactly what I have experienced. Handling is king. The power and speed that you can’t safely ride is useless. Then, very few had fried 205h50 motors, and almost all of those who did were climbing slow, or repeated hard acceleration uphill stop and go.Tony01 said:I’m pushing 24kw in a qs205. I don’t know my top speed and don’t really care anymore because it’s illegal anyway. I should have got a torque wind. I’ve had it up to 86mph. The 205 is already very heavy. Before I got it I also wanted a 273 but when I finally received my 205 I realized the 273 would have been a mistake. There is more to riding than gunning it at a stoplight. I can smoke 95% of vehicles on the road, and I can lean in hard like people with 273s can’t, because of the difference in weight. You know what a heavy rear feels like in a turn? It begins to slide out in a stutter. Extremely uncomfortable sensation.
Work in progress.
MadRhino said:What I had said earlier in this thread: ‘bigger motors require more power, thus bigger batteries’, also applies to faster stator windings.
And, Minde gave an example of this. If one will not make use of the power and speed of a bigger, or faster motor, he is overbuilding, and this practice always has a cost. This cost is not (only) about money, but also in weight and performance.
We all, or should, want to build the best and safest bike for the performance that we target. Thus, components must be matching each other to achieve a consistent build.
@Junno. I am not contesting your requirements for power and speed. But the sample bike in the posted pic, does make me think you could achieve better overall handling for this performance.
Apply cold water to burned area!minde28383 said:If you have no idea than context makes no sense to you.john61ct said:Please find a better English word than "pools" for that meaning, no idea what you're trying to convey there
I need this too but I was reading somewhere that FF causes damage to the glue holding the magnets. It’s gonna be a hot summer that I might only be able to ride early am or late night.HK12K said:This reminds me that I really need to get some ferrofluid and hubsinks for my 205 before summer. Heavy guy, heavy bike, plus mountains. At times I need all of the heat shedding ability that I can muster.
MadRhino said:Exactly what I have experienced. Handling is king. The power and speed that you can’t safely ride is useless. Then, very few had fried 205h50 motors, and almost all of those who did were climbing slow, or repeated hard acceleration uphill stop and go.
I did lace a few 273 for friends, but was never tempted to build with this 56lbs motor. I would rather go mid drive if I needed a 273 hub build to do my ride. For the weight of a 273 hub build, I could achieve much better handling and overall performance with a big mid drive.
Your work in progress is ugly for an ebike IMO. :wink: , but it does have proper geometry and that is the most important for a fast ebike.
HK12K said:I may explore painting the internals ala Doctorbass while I'm at it to seal everything if it's still in good shape in there, then add the ff and sinks.
HK12K said:Not sure, but colored would presumably make it easier to ensure complete coverage where as with clear you could conceivably miss a spot without realizing it.
so important....
Well curiously i'm preparing the motor for my 2nd NYX that i'm building for the friends that will visit me... and the reason why i'm actually protecting that future motor, is to avoid exactly the one like a motor i got to repair that at first had apparently a problem of shorted wires, but when i opened it i was all that rust!!!
So there are ALOT good reasons why you should add protection to the inside of our motor!.. when your ebike is exposed to rain, it will one day or another be affected by water intrusion and results often the lost of your motor or require several hours to repair the damages. on the other hand if you apply the proper coating inside it will prevent rust and make your great motor to last longer! I have 10 years of experience in ebike diy and this advice will save you money and extend your ebike motor life!
MadRhino said:They have about the same efficiency, but the bigger the motor the more power it can be fed. When you twist the full grip, the bigger motor does suck your battery like there is no tomorrow.![]()
The QS 205 h50 is big already for an ebike, making motorcycle performance and does require a very good build to safely exploit its full potential. The 273 is too heavy IMO, its weight and power does make for the need of even more weight in batteries, wheels, suspension, brakes...
MadRhino said:I have many. How much power do you want to feed?
Right now, I am riding a modified Infineon eb3 board with 4110 mosfets. Trapezoidal. The only non sinewave controller that I have found to run a QS205H50. I don’t advise trying, for I have fried a few before succeeding. Your best buy is the Nucular.ebike11 said:MadRhino said:I have many. How much power do you want to feed?
Just curious the controller youre using with the 24s graphene pack and the qs205
MadRhino said:Right now, I am riding a modified Infineon eb3 board with 4110 mosfets. Trapezoidal. The only non sinewave controller that I have found to run a QS205H50. I don’t advise trying, for I have fried a few before succeeding. Your best buy is the Nucular.ebike11 said:MadRhino said:I have many. How much power do you want to feed?
Just curious the controller youre using with the 24s graphene pack and the qs205