ReeseEngineering
1 µW
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2011
- Messages
- 4
Hello,
I am new to the forum, but I have been reading up
the last few weeks on all the good info here.
Just to get it out there, I have a BS in Mechanical Engineering,
live in Calif. (SB county) and am very mechanically hands-on.
(I own and operate a small machining/welding shop)
However I am not quite so electrically knowledgeable.
I couldn't design my own circuit board, but I can troubleshoot
and fix pre-1980 automobile electrical problems, I have a ton
of electrical support equipment (various supplies, meters, and
a scope), and I can solder like a pro.
About 5 years ago I built a gas-powered hard-tail bike
with a Honda 4-stroke GX35 friction drive centrifugal clutch.
I have put about 2000 miles on it and it has good and bad points.
Good on-road for short (<4 mile) distances.
Good price to convert (about $400)
Bad off road, bad center of gravity, bad for tires,
bad if you want to be quiet (passing other cyclists).
I've also learned a lot in the process.
Now I want to build a motorized mountain bike.
I have 3 mountain bikes, but chose my Kona Kikapu for this endeavor
based on other people’s success and available space in the frame.
(Other choices were Gary Fisher Joshua Z0 and Specialized FSR)
I have been looking around at what it will take to do this
project and I am willing to spend the money to do it right.
My goals are:
- Durability off road (motor and electronics need to handle
serious vibrations, dust, and occasional mud, but minimal
water) I can hot-glue board components if needed.
- Around 27 - 30MPH top speed on-road on the flat MTB tires.
(If it goes faster than that... ok, but I probably won't take it up that high)
- I want enough power to go up dirt fire roads and dirt hills at a decent clip.
- about 10 mile range at first, and I'm willing to pedal too.
Expandable to 20 miles later if needed.
- regen brake (feasible with most controllers I have seen)
- keep the electronics (Motor, 2 batteries, and C.A. unit) under $2000, less if possible.
- take consideration of weight (possibly start with low voltage,
low Ah, and upgrade as necessary)
I *think* I need to be looking at a 72V system, but this is where
my electronics skills lag. This is also where I have been confused
about the choices out there for Motors, Controllers, Batteries, etc.
and, most importantly: where to purchase them.
I have no problem piece-mailing this together, as long as I understand
what I am actually doing and not fry something expensive (or myself)
in the process. I’m not afraid to void any warranties as long as I
(kinda) know what I am doing.
I am leaning towards the 9C 2807 motor from ebikes.ca but they
are currently sold out. ok I can wait, but maybe there is something
better for my application? 2806? 2808?
I do understand the 06 07 08 winding idea.
06 is less windings per pole but can take you faster relative to 07 or 08
I'm not sure if ebikes.ca even sells a 2808, but I have seen
them online somewhere. I was going to use "good" spokes
and a "good" wheel on whatever motor I decide to get.
I know I want to get the Cycle Analyst, but I may have
to custom wire it to whatever controller I need.
Ok, no big deal as long as I know it will actually
work before I go and buy something incompatible.
This is where the bulk of my questions come from
regarding batteries and controllers.
I think I have determined that Infineon controllers are "the way to go".
But which one do I need for my application?
35A? 40A? 45A? 9FET? 12FET? 18FET?
I understand basic power relationships, voltage, amperage, wattage etc.
I have used the simulator at ebikes.ca with various motor,
controller, battery configs. But I am confused why higher-amp
controllers yield lower speed for the same given battery and
motor combo? I am more interested in Torque because I think
that will be key to off-road performance. I typically equated
higher Torque to more Amps, instead of higher voltage,
but maybe I am way off-base here.
Is there a specific controller to get that offers me the flexibility
of using, say, 36V or 48V at first and then re-configuring the same
controller to 72V later if I want/need to?
Where do I even get one of these controllers?
ebikes.ca? Ebay? E-crazyman?
Eyourmomgoestocollege.com?
Coupled with that, what batteries should I be considering or avoiding?
I *think* I want to use LiFePO4 batteries, but maybe LiMh?
Should I be weary of “Ping†batteries on Ebay?
I have seen others using them with success.
What should I be looking for in terms of capacity? 10Ah? 15Ah?
How do they get higher capacity?
More cells in a battery pack or just bigger cells in a pack?
Does higher capacity mean longer range?
What other options are there for “good†LiFePO4 batteries?
Should I consider “making†my own battery from some kit or something?
Can I just hook two LiFePO4 36V batteries in Series and get my 72V?
Can I start with one 36V battery and a 45A controller and then upgrade to 72V later?
Will a brand new 36V battery and a used 36V battery hooked in series
make a bad combo for 72V down the road?
Whew. I think that's it. :?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I will post a link to photos as soon as things start getting serious.
Reese
I am new to the forum, but I have been reading up
the last few weeks on all the good info here.
Just to get it out there, I have a BS in Mechanical Engineering,
live in Calif. (SB county) and am very mechanically hands-on.
(I own and operate a small machining/welding shop)
However I am not quite so electrically knowledgeable.
I couldn't design my own circuit board, but I can troubleshoot
and fix pre-1980 automobile electrical problems, I have a ton
of electrical support equipment (various supplies, meters, and
a scope), and I can solder like a pro.
About 5 years ago I built a gas-powered hard-tail bike
with a Honda 4-stroke GX35 friction drive centrifugal clutch.
I have put about 2000 miles on it and it has good and bad points.
Good on-road for short (<4 mile) distances.
Good price to convert (about $400)
Bad off road, bad center of gravity, bad for tires,
bad if you want to be quiet (passing other cyclists).
I've also learned a lot in the process.
Now I want to build a motorized mountain bike.
I have 3 mountain bikes, but chose my Kona Kikapu for this endeavor
based on other people’s success and available space in the frame.
(Other choices were Gary Fisher Joshua Z0 and Specialized FSR)
I have been looking around at what it will take to do this
project and I am willing to spend the money to do it right.
My goals are:
- Durability off road (motor and electronics need to handle
serious vibrations, dust, and occasional mud, but minimal
water) I can hot-glue board components if needed.
- Around 27 - 30MPH top speed on-road on the flat MTB tires.
(If it goes faster than that... ok, but I probably won't take it up that high)
- I want enough power to go up dirt fire roads and dirt hills at a decent clip.
- about 10 mile range at first, and I'm willing to pedal too.
Expandable to 20 miles later if needed.
- regen brake (feasible with most controllers I have seen)
- keep the electronics (Motor, 2 batteries, and C.A. unit) under $2000, less if possible.
- take consideration of weight (possibly start with low voltage,
low Ah, and upgrade as necessary)
I *think* I need to be looking at a 72V system, but this is where
my electronics skills lag. This is also where I have been confused
about the choices out there for Motors, Controllers, Batteries, etc.
and, most importantly: where to purchase them.
I have no problem piece-mailing this together, as long as I understand
what I am actually doing and not fry something expensive (or myself)
in the process. I’m not afraid to void any warranties as long as I
(kinda) know what I am doing.
I am leaning towards the 9C 2807 motor from ebikes.ca but they
are currently sold out. ok I can wait, but maybe there is something
better for my application? 2806? 2808?
I do understand the 06 07 08 winding idea.
06 is less windings per pole but can take you faster relative to 07 or 08
I'm not sure if ebikes.ca even sells a 2808, but I have seen
them online somewhere. I was going to use "good" spokes
and a "good" wheel on whatever motor I decide to get.
I know I want to get the Cycle Analyst, but I may have
to custom wire it to whatever controller I need.
Ok, no big deal as long as I know it will actually
work before I go and buy something incompatible.
This is where the bulk of my questions come from
regarding batteries and controllers.
I think I have determined that Infineon controllers are "the way to go".
But which one do I need for my application?
35A? 40A? 45A? 9FET? 12FET? 18FET?
I understand basic power relationships, voltage, amperage, wattage etc.
I have used the simulator at ebikes.ca with various motor,
controller, battery configs. But I am confused why higher-amp
controllers yield lower speed for the same given battery and
motor combo? I am more interested in Torque because I think
that will be key to off-road performance. I typically equated
higher Torque to more Amps, instead of higher voltage,
but maybe I am way off-base here.
Is there a specific controller to get that offers me the flexibility
of using, say, 36V or 48V at first and then re-configuring the same
controller to 72V later if I want/need to?
Where do I even get one of these controllers?
ebikes.ca? Ebay? E-crazyman?
Eyourmomgoestocollege.com?
Coupled with that, what batteries should I be considering or avoiding?
I *think* I want to use LiFePO4 batteries, but maybe LiMh?
Should I be weary of “Ping†batteries on Ebay?
I have seen others using them with success.
What should I be looking for in terms of capacity? 10Ah? 15Ah?
How do they get higher capacity?
More cells in a battery pack or just bigger cells in a pack?
Does higher capacity mean longer range?
What other options are there for “good†LiFePO4 batteries?
Should I consider “making†my own battery from some kit or something?
Can I just hook two LiFePO4 36V batteries in Series and get my 72V?
Can I start with one 36V battery and a 45A controller and then upgrade to 72V later?
Will a brand new 36V battery and a used 36V battery hooked in series
make a bad combo for 72V down the road?
Whew. I think that's it. :?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I will post a link to photos as soon as things start getting serious.
Reese