Thanks John. That's useful info. It's certainly good to have plenty of headroom in the heat resistance of the magnets. We don't want to design for normal running at high temperatures, though. It's less efficient and high risk with such a small thermal mass....John in CR said:When I was modeling heat transfer from hubbies I used 100W/m²K for the convective heat transfer coefficient, and I was in the ballpark with Justin's measured results, but that was at 30mph and higher rpm due to a smaller wheel. As Luke stated though, top shelf magnets will surely put the ability to transfer heat to a safe range, because the delta T can easily be more than doubled without heat damage.