Stevil_Knevil
10 kW
I'll exhale a sigh of relief. I've seen an awful lot of worthwhile words spilled here.. must admit that I'm leaning towards hub motors.
=^) -S
=^) -S
safe said:Hill Climbing Ability (Summary)
Okay... so what?
In first gear it takes about 3 minutes to reach the top of the hill and it uses a total of 110 Watt Hours to get there with a "waste" of 40 Watt hours.
In fifth gear it takes about 8 minutes to reach the top of the hill and it uses a total of 197 Watt Hours to get there with a "waste" of 131 Watt hours.
In terms of time you save 5 minutes. (it takes over twice as long in 5th gear)
In terms of energy you save 87 Watt Hours. (the last 4 Watt hours are lost due to wind resistance at the higher speed for 1st gear)
While a hub motor with massive "hemi" styled energy could literally "lift" itself out of the low rpm nightmare, the typical small motor cannot do this and finds itself wallowing in pain. This is exactly what I've felt on my bike when I run the "tall gears" and try to climb one of the steeper hills in my neighborhood. If I switch back down to the "low gears" then not only do I climb the hill with ease, but also much faster. So low gears for hills are very beneficial. (it's not just acceleration that gearing helps)
What's "funny" here is that the bike in first gear could probably ride to the top of the hill and turn around and ride back down again until he meets up with the bike in fifth gear, then turn around and race back up again and still win and still use the same or less energy. The "tortiose" loses in this contest... the low geared bike wins easily...
safe said:Leeps said:Could you graph that with time as the x axis and speed as a dependent variable it would be easier to read.
This is time on the y-axis and the x-axis is related to the gear ratio so for a low gearing each increment translates to a smaller speed jump and the higher gearing translates to a big jump in speed. My spreadsheet is based on rpm so since we are talking about the DIFFERENCE that gearing makes to rpm you have to account for it somehow. (maybe I'll find some better way to express it later)
Anyway... this is the time it takes for the bike to accelerate from 0-10 mph in each of the first five gear options. So the idea is that you START in one of the gears and use it as a "hub motor" like fixed gear. There's no "shifting" in this chart... it's just "fixed gear" performance at various gear ratios. This shows the advantages of proper gearing over an excessively high gear. (like one that would get you to 50 mph) This "should" be intuitively obvious because just like with a car you place it into FIRST get to get going and then shift to FIFTH gear on the freeway to get top speed. (somehow people with electric bikes think they can reinvent the laws of physics!)
The numbers are:
First Gear - 1.89 seconds @ 2621 Watts.
Fifth Gear - 2.85 seconds @ 3679 Watts.
Time saved in first gear - 0.959 seconds (85% delay avoided)
Energy saved in first gear - 1058 Watts. (40% waste avoided)
And you do this at EVERY stop... so the DIFFERENCE adds up over time...
safe said:xyster said:This is meaningless. You have to calculate the energy lost in watt-hours (not watt/hours and not watts) to compare it to the energy in the battery as measured in watt-hours.
A "watt hour" is one watt for one hour worth of energy. So if you take the battery in total it can provide it's watt hour rating times sixty minutes, times sixty seconds since watts are based upon seconds. (one amp, one volt, one second)
The percentage is what matters... there's ONLY a 1% loss over an entire hour of standard riding and that's not that bad... so relax... the losses aren't terrible...
60,000 Watts equals 16.67 Watt hours of energy... (but I see your point... is that 60,000 Watts over a second or over some other interval... I'll have to check my spreadsheet)
I'm back... the 1000 Watt loss occurs over a period of the "lost" one second of accelleration. So the numbers are good... the 60,000 Watts can be viewed as being associated with "roughly" a second. All is fine. (close enough)
So it's 60,000 Watt/Seconds... verses 1440 Watt/Hours...
My Duster felt quick and was fun, but at the track it ran the same or worse times.Matt Gruber said:in 1972 i was so persuaded by a similar argument, i replaced the 3.23 open rear in my '70 318 duster with a 4.56 posi.
this really impressed my friends!
so we went down the 1/4 mile drag strip and,
guess how much quicker the et was?
xyster said:Safe- we all love you.
The Fechmaster's crop from his mountain hide-away must have just come in today...
8)
joystix2 said:Wow just finally got on this thread. I read the last 5 pages. In my opinion to each his own. If you live in a very hilly area, have only enough room for smaller AH batts on the bike, or are building for liteness then gearing is your best option. If you don't mind heavier, live in an area with a lot of flat straights with huge bike lanes and the largest hill you encounter is an overpass like me then go with the Cadillac, like me and get a Phoenix. Also theirs the Puma motor which looks promising with power and weight. Internal GEARED HUB!!!! best of both worlds...
Ric
What do you think would be a good distance that everyone could agree on? 1/8th mile?
xyster said:What do you think would be a good distance that everyone could agree on? 1/8th mile?
Works for me. Another way to do it is time to speed, like 35mph or so. Time-to-speed trials might be a little easier to conduct in a video-verifiable manner.
Since going up eight more volts, I've been looking forward to recording new acceleration and hill climbing vids. And I look forward to seeing video of the geared bikes in action!
0-60km/h sounds like a good benchmark.
safe said:A 3000 Watt "fire breathing monster" will beat a 500 Watt cyclone motor no matter how good the guy is with the gears...
It's just as ridiculous for me to compare my 750 Watt bike to a 500 Watt bike as it is to compare a 750 Watt bike to a 3000 Watt bike.
Everybody plays... some bike go up to 20kph, 30kph, 40+ , so there can be a basis for comparison at numerous levels.
Every bike can go 1/8 mile, so that would be common to all.
On paper there is little to debate...
I say run what you got, street racing style.