Matt Gruber
1 MW
TUZ
existing wiring works great as a shunt. TRY IT!
existing wiring works great as a shunt. TRY IT!
Mathurin said:Nope, you'd have to look at it to get an idea what it's reading.
it takes practice, but i don't have to look at it directly
if it is not mouned in your field of vision u will hate it. Also if it displays too much other stuff u will hate it.
xyster said:By your graphs there, the unite has a maximum efficiency of what looks like about 50% (3600W in 1800W out).
Is that correct?
Seems unfair to compare a motor's efficiency at a power well outside whatever it's designed for. Since this unite is a 1200 watt motor, what would these graphs show at 1200 watts out?
WOW safe u sure have a lot to learn! Or maybe it's part my fault.
Ammeters are for people that run small motors with too much current and wonder why they don't work that great...
safe said:Ammeters are for people that run small motors with too much current and wonder why they don't work that great... (the "self restriction mindset" is a way to cover for a more profound design problem, namely, using the wrong sized motor for an application)
TylerDurden said:just buy the biggest motor available
accept the manufacturers' motor ratings and specifically underpower the motor
buy the off-the-shelf turnkey system and enjoy the ride
don't care about the system activity (no speedo, amps, Vs, miles, etc.)
run continuously at WOT and need to buy a motor that can handle the desired power indefiinetly.
safe said:This is how a multispeed spreads the power around. If each of those powerbands are "efficient" in their own right (not pictured) then you have near perfect efficieny EVERYWHERE and maximum power EVERYWHERE.
TylerDurden said:This is where the NuVinci CVP comes in... maximizing efficiency without the peaks and valleys.
I'm sure one day it might be possible to have a hub motor with a NuVinci gear built in.
Can you compete on price at all?
Do you even have any idea how much your bike has cost so far?
xyster said:My maintenance and upkeep costs, including battery replacement, I bet is much less than your maintenance and upkeep costs. Tallying the five year comprehensive cost totals and dividing by miles ridden would make for a more practical, dollars per mile comparison.
If you had "access" to the things I have created from scratch you might change your tune... maybe one day you might even be a customer of mine?
Your bike costs 4.25
My bike costs 4.22
So in the "big picture" we are debating trivia. Compared to the "enemy" we are all on the "same side"...
xyster said:And as far as being your customer, I'd demand a free sample of the bike first!