The Tongxin Motor thread

I have this one:

100mm 190rpm motor in 26"wheel: $300

In Holland they are 250 euro.

I use it in 28" rim
 
I looked at the Freedom site and they only have front motors. I ride a trike and would need a rear motor, probably the 260 rpm one for 16-20" wheels as mine are 20". I'm a glutton for punishment as the last Tongxin I had lasted 4.5 miles before the ring gear cracked. I do like light geared motors that don't make noise, however, and figure it would be worth another try at one.
otherDoc
 
It's been suggested that a steel band around the ring could prevent the cracking. I'm assuming it would need to be interference-fit to make a difference.

The magnet issues coudl be prevented by applying high-temperature epoxy to them before use, I expect.

Heat issues coudl be mitigated by ventilation, with holes around the outer band between the spoke flanges, and a ring of holes on each side around the bearing area. Wouldn't be good in wet-weather or really dusty areas, though, because of the freewheel and planetary areas not being sealed against such, and getting contamination in the grease.
 
I machined up an aluminium ring to add some more strength after i broke a ring for a second time. You have to undercut it slightly to clear the cover. I then found out the next weak point was the hardened motor shaft which broke up probably because of the extra pressure exerted on it. It seemed like a good idea at the time but caused problems elsewhere.
So i rebuilt it again and left off the machined re-enforcing ring.

My bike has a 260rpm tongxin in a 26wheel, it's been my commuter for the last couple of years. It's very quiet but i know it could break at any moment.

IMG_7844.jpg
 
The Stig said:
oh man... anyway to strengthen the shaft?

Nope, i don't think so. The best thing is to fit it and enjoy the motor for as long as you can. It may be 4000miles or 4miles, you can never tell.
 
here is a picture of the epicyclic drive from my tongxin middrive project, it has about 4000km on the clock as a front hubmotor. The axle was twisted after a little clush with a curbstone, so I decided to reuse it as middrive motor. I had no problems with a cracked ring or broken shaft yet.

c0wc00vgt58hf7pqj.jpg
 
Today i recieved my motor.
The seller vfiets.nl fit a compleet new motor. Top service.

Hope this one last little longer.
 
I have a sensorless motor something similar to this. Its same size and looking through one of the holes in on the side of the motor I can se copper winding. If its geared or not I dont know. When I first plugged in my motor with the phase wires it spun the motor but not the wheel. After I changed phase wires for another setting it spun the whole wheel like a normal motor do.

The motor was old stock like 2-3 years from now. 36v rated 6A or something inscription on motor cover.

I use it with 12s lipo and 15a controller. 20" wheel. No overheating just slow topping out at about 20 mph and takes any hill (15% for comparison goes at 15 mph).

:D
 
leffex said:
If its geared or not I dont know. When I first plugged in my motor with the phase wires it spun the motor but not the wheel. After I changed phase wires for another setting it spun the whole wheel like a normal motor do.
Then it is "geared" in that it has a freewheel/clutch inside it, and most likely a planetary setup using either gears or rollers. You'd have to open it up on the other side to see the gearing type, most likely.

I use it with 12s lipo and 15a controller. 20" wheel. No overheating just slow topping out at about 20 mph and takes any hill (15% for comparison goes at 15 mph).
If you use it with nearly three times it's rated current, you may melt it down if it bogs down at high load or run it very long at it's less efficient speeds. (the motor itself might nto melt, but if it is geared with plastic gears, they may heat up so mcuh they get soft and deform). Just speaking from experience with a similar but slightly larger Fusin geared hub. :oops:
 
Are the Keyde motors Tongxin. I was planning on getting one since you have to keep a really low profile here in New jersey. The website that sells them sells a rear wheel w/ disc set up with the controller inside the hub. this is very tempting since with paniers, I doubt LEOs would be able to notice that I am running an electric motor.

If so does anyone have experience with Keyde?

Thanks
 
http://www.endless-sphere.com/forums/search.php?keywords=Keyde&terms=all&author=&sc=1&sf=all&sk=t&sd=d&sr=posts&st=0&ch=-1&t=0&submit=Search
 
Hallo everybody, I see this thread is quite old ... as it is my ebike.

I got the Tongxin WZKC24 controller broken (should see it attached here) and I am struggling a lot to get a spare one that is working with my motor.

I tried several sensorless controllers also cutting, crimping assemblying different possibilities... but nothing worked as of now.


Does anybody has a suggestion on how to get one of this spare controller?

Thanks a lot in advance.

DSC_0079.JPG
 
What specifically happens with the new controllers you have tried?

What specifically happened that caused the old controller to fail? (or, what happened just before it did fail?)

Is the hole in the potting of the old controller something that happened to it from an internal failure, or were you trying to get into it to repair it?

I dont' know of a source for that specific controller, but there are likely a lot of other controllers that will work. Do you require that specific controller for a particular reason?

The Tongxin I have has hall sensors, so it doesnt' have to be used with a sensorless controller. Does yours not have hall sensors?
 
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