johnrobholmes
10 MW
The face of the motor is stationary. The can of the motor spins, and is where you would have to bolt the chainring.
recumpence said:The only negative with those motors is the lack of an output shaft. They are designed with a prop adaptor on the end of the can, but not an output shaft.![]()
Matt
recumpence said:I know what you mean.
Even though I have my bike setup for 4,000 watts, it is geared for 40mph. So,
the accelleration (though powerful) is not nearly as powerful as it could be.
If I geared this thing for 30mph, it would probably wheelie. :wink:
Actually, when I tighten the clutch to pull 7,000 watts, the bike just starts
to feel truely quick. Tall gearing really hampers accelleration.
Matt
scottclarke said:You have to bear in mind it doesn't have any real accel at less than 20mph. As it is
now on 24V it has good fast accel between 25 and 38mph. It is a narrow range but it
suits my needs very well. It does require pedalling along with a little effort and
gentle throttle use all the way up to 20mph. Or, you could accel REALLY
slowly - no pedalling required. I can pedal up to around 33mph with sensible
cadence so I will get the fat burning activity I require!
58mph was with a 88 tooth gear and a 10 tooth pinion.
Currently running the 91 tooth along with the 10. Top speed is 38mph according
to GPS - measured over a 1 mile distance.
I am not happy with the performance from start to 20mph - thats a fact. Yesterday
I had the opportunity to use a fast current logger and it showed spike peaks on
the order of 280A. As suspected - this is the reason for the bad low speed
performance. Until the motor gets to 3000rpm its basically 'stalled' and draws huge
current.
What I would really like to do for a general use version would be to gear it
down - say something like 25:1 then bump up the voltage until the current spikes
are just below the Jazz's cut-off point (220A it seems from measurements). Geared
that way I think it might be possible to have a top speed of 40mph or so with
faultless accel.
Thats what I want next - it is very much like my old axi powered scheme which
worked fine but drove the pedals.
Scott
GGoodrum said:One thing I learned with the Mariner is that even though it tops
out at about 2700W, with the extra torque benefit that the gearing provides, it
actually has better performance than the 5303/72V setup it replaced, and that
one hit 5000W peaks.
GGoodrum said:I'm sure the Nexus hubs can handle the power. There's a guy with a bike shop down in
San Diego (Rusty Spokes, in Pacific Beach...) who custom builds chopper-style motor
bikes, using Etek and Mars motors. He uses these same Nexus 3-speed hubs with these
beasts, and they have worked flawlessly, even pumping 15 hp through them...
Anyway, he's never had a single problem with any of the Nexus hubs.
Miles said:Yes, the link that I posted was to Michael Kutter's patent. I've lost interest in it a bit because the pedal gearing changes so much depending on whether the motor isn't being used, or not.
There's also a similar epicyclic differential drive on the Prius. These things have been around for quite a while...
I like the idea of doing something similar with 2 RC motors![]()
perbear said:If anyone is interested I can post some pictures of my 3D model plus my Excel power calculations. As for the real thing so far I have the LRK stator laminates and it's magnets. And a brand new bike with hydraulic brakes in the garage waiting for the motor![]()
Cheers,
Per
Miles said:Yes, please post the model pics & spreadsheet, Per
quote]
Here is a picture of my model, I still miss the belt pully - have to decide what standard (i.e. cost level) to go for.
Per
Dee Jay said:How 'bout them beans? A Sanyo tranny and RC motor combo!
http://www.endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2744
We have truck-loads of these hubs here, many of them just abandoned in the streets, Woo woo! I found an abandoned one just this week.
I never seriously considered using this hub because I didn't want to deal the built-in electronics I knew nothing about.
perbear said:Here is a picture of my model, I still miss the belt pully .......
perbear said:I would like to post some files (Excel and drawings) but I have not found a file area - do I have to post some more before file area is revealed?
fechter said:You should look for one that has the shaft coming out of the mount side. If you use a belt or chain, there will be a lot of radial load and you don't want the sprocket to be too far away from the bearings.
And pedals, too............?Jeremy said:Motor + Speedhub + gear, everything together in a big bottom bracket.
swbluto said:There's going to be "should be negligible" unaccounted for errors like motor overheating and magnetic field saturation from too much current. :wink: