Hi,
I want to DIY a non-hub motor drive by mounting a suitable motor in the center of the frame
and attach a sprocket to the spinning part of the motor and use a chain to connect that sprocket
to the smaller sprocket on the front set of sprockets connected to the pedals. This would restrict me
from using that sprocket for pedaling, but that is ok.
This is the plan: Green is motor, Blue would be attached sprocket, yellow is chain, black is some mount from motor to frame
http://imgur.com/IlHd9Do
I have 27" wheels on the bike I'm trying to convert, and I'm looking at trying a spindle motor with controller like this:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01DLT24R8?psc=1
I want to control the speed and monitor battery percent, etc. through an Arduino that I have like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYFNUQgE26E
My question is, will that spindle motor give me any usable amount of power? I'm not looking for 0-30mph with no pedaling,
I just want to be able to turn the motor on while I'm pedaling to provide some extra help and ease my effort.
It's 400W of power but says it can be controlled at 60V/10A/600W so I'm a little confused as to all these numbers.
I am choosing to build myself rather than buy a kit because I want to learn and have the satisfaction of doing it myself,
even if the results are subpar. It will also be cheaper this way (besides the fact that it might fail and waste a bunch of $)
Am I totally off track here? There are so many measurements between volts, amps, watts, horsepower, rpm, torque etc. that I'm not sure
how to translate all of it into meaningful data on how well I'll be able to spin a wheel.
I've been doing my best to read and lurk, but I think I will get my questions answered best by just asking them.
I want to DIY a non-hub motor drive by mounting a suitable motor in the center of the frame
and attach a sprocket to the spinning part of the motor and use a chain to connect that sprocket
to the smaller sprocket on the front set of sprockets connected to the pedals. This would restrict me
from using that sprocket for pedaling, but that is ok.
This is the plan: Green is motor, Blue would be attached sprocket, yellow is chain, black is some mount from motor to frame
http://imgur.com/IlHd9Do
I have 27" wheels on the bike I'm trying to convert, and I'm looking at trying a spindle motor with controller like this:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01DLT24R8?psc=1
I want to control the speed and monitor battery percent, etc. through an Arduino that I have like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYFNUQgE26E
My question is, will that spindle motor give me any usable amount of power? I'm not looking for 0-30mph with no pedaling,
I just want to be able to turn the motor on while I'm pedaling to provide some extra help and ease my effort.
It's 400W of power but says it can be controlled at 60V/10A/600W so I'm a little confused as to all these numbers.
I am choosing to build myself rather than buy a kit because I want to learn and have the satisfaction of doing it myself,
even if the results are subpar. It will also be cheaper this way (besides the fact that it might fail and waste a bunch of $)
Am I totally off track here? There are so many measurements between volts, amps, watts, horsepower, rpm, torque etc. that I'm not sure
how to translate all of it into meaningful data on how well I'll be able to spin a wheel.
I've been doing my best to read and lurk, but I think I will get my questions answered best by just asking them.