d8veh said:bigoilbob said:As for it being a "more solid transmission", the verdict is still out. I shelled a sun gear after less than 250 miles.
All the broken gears I've seen were on trikes. It happens when you push the motor backwards and the clutch jams. This locks both clutches and provides a massive torque to the ring gear, which splits it. Was yours on a normal bicycle or something else?
I hope not a dumb question, but wouldnt you know which caused the failure from the damaged gear? Load or rolling?bigoilbob said:d8veh said:bigoilbob said:As for it being a "more solid transmission", the verdict is still out. I shelled a sun gear after less than 250 miles.
All the broken gears I've seen were on trikes. It happens when you push the motor backwards and the clutch jams. This locks both clutches and provides a massive torque to the ring gear, which splits it. Was yours on a normal bicycle or something else?
No, it was/is on a BikeE2 recumbent tandem. The 16" front wheel. I'm running the 48 volt system, on "power", so I'm sure I'm stressing the machine harder than many. But it's sold for that, with no weasel words waving me off. And no controller hot rod mods either.
With my replacement sun gear, I just now passed the mileage I put on the shredded one. With none of the ominous (upon hindsight) warning signs. I credit that, to (1) luck, and/or (2) the advice I took in these fora on how to properly lube the gears (i.e. not the way Xiongdang sends them out), and/or listening to folks like you who tell me to NEVER roll the hub backwards. I think I had some sporadic clutch failure with the shredded sun gear that allowed me to occasionally freewheel it back with no resistance - shame on me.
bigoilbob said:d8veh said:bigoilbob said:As for it being a "more solid transmission", the verdict is still out. I shelled a sun gear after less than 250 miles.
All the broken gears I've seen were on trikes. It happens when you push the motor backwards and the clutch jams. This locks both clutches and provides a massive torque to the ring gear, which splits it. Was yours on a normal bicycle or something else?
No, it was/is on a BikeE2 recumbent tandem. The 16" front wheel. I'm running the 48 volt system, on "power", so I'm sure I'm stressing the machine harder than many. But it's sold for that, with no weasel words waving me off. And no controller hot rod mods either.
With my replacement sun gear, I just now passed the mileage I put on the shredded one. With none of the ominous (upon hindsight) warning signs. I credit that, to (1) luck, and/or (2) the advice I took in these fora on how to properly lube the gears (i.e. not the way Xiongdang sends them out), and/or listening to folks like you who tell me to NEVER roll the hub backwards. I think I had some sporadic clutch failure with the shredded sun gear that allowed me to occasionally freewheel it back with no resistance - shame on me.
There's loads of spring-loaded thumb-throttles to choose from. You should be able to get one from Xiongda with their kit.techedge said:cycleops612, thanks for your reply.
I have edited my post to point out why front wheel drive wont work for me. Your exclamation "Having the trailer pushing the bike sounds fraught" rather ignores what I'm trying to do - not drive a light trailer along a flat street in dry weather, but actually a relatively heavy trailer along a remote sandy track and up (and down) steep sandy hills. A powered trailer is an absolute necessity - It's not something I'm willing to negotiate and one option is to actually dispense with the bicycle motor and just have the trailer motor and 100% of the load on the trailer.
As much as your comment "front hub could be swapped out for another wheel when not towing if desired" may be entirely appropriate in a big city - out in a desert, I want to maximise my towing capacity and hill climbing ability without compromise - I don't give a rats about "Benefiting from my motor investment at all times" - I want to do one very specific thing as well as is possible.
You say "Less traction on the front is an issue on powerful cars, not so much wheelspin on an ebike methinks". Well, I also agree it's not about power! In fact it's all about torque - on a front wheel even a small amount of torque can spin a front wheel in loose conditions.
As for simplicity - I agree! That's why I've chosen internally geared hub motors (less chance for the external environment affecting things - something I've yet to actually test with the XD motor). However, when simplicity gets in the way of function, then some engineering has to be done.
My apologies also - I should have given a timeline for what I'm trying to achieve - I have roughly 12 months to organise some technology that will do what I described in my initial post - I fully expect that I'll have to design and build electronics, write software, and spend many hour testing and refining what I'm trying to build - not so much a hobby as a passion! Yes, "Time is money" as is "you get what you pay for" - I didn't actually expect that there was something I could purchase out of a box that will do what I want - for any amount of money.
cycleops612 said:d8veh said:friendly1uk said:It's a great idea, but nothing comes even remotely close to the number of problems these have. Both from the motor and the control gear. It's shockingly bad.
What are all the problems? Did you ever use a Xiongda?
News to me too. I did a quick scan, seem ok to me
As i alluded to b4, seems to me their lack of sales? - is due to being a cm or two too fat. It restricts its use a lot. No front disks on a mainstream MTB e.g.
friendly1uk said:There is a 44 page thread on these. I was watching it closely at the beginning but as time passed people were having multiple failures. Who would want a bike you can't roll backwards confidently. One chap just stopped to talk to a friend and couldn't pull away. The choice of controllers is limited and their performance unsatisfactory. I'm not the first to say people should just give up on these. That is not something you ever hear around here, where people can generally fix anything.
That information is completely misleading. .... [I have] done over 5000 miles. Before that, I tried every sort of motor. Now, I wouldn't have anything else. You don't need a wide choice of controllers
d8veh said:friendly1uk said:There is a 44 page thread on these. I was watching it closely at the beginning but as time passed people were having multiple failures. Who would want a bike you can't roll backwards confidently. One chap just stopped to talk to a friend and couldn't pull away. The choice of controllers is limited and their performance unsatisfactory. I'm not the first to say people should just give up on these. That is not something you ever hear around here, where people can generally fix anything.
That information is completely misleading. Have you tried one yourself? What experience do you have with them that authorises you to tell people to give up on them.
As I said, all the failures that I've heard of were on recumbents. Nothing to worry about on a normal bicycle.
I've been using them for over two years and done over 5000 miles. Before that, I tried every sort of motor. Now, I wouldn't have anything else. You don't need a wide choice of controllers if the ones that they supply do the job perfectly.
glend said:d8veh said:friendly1uk said:There is a 44 page thread on these. I was watching it closely at the beginning but as time passed people were having multiple failures. Who would want a bike you can't roll backwards confidently. One chap just stopped to talk to a friend and couldn't pull away. The choice of controllers is limited and their performance unsatisfactory. I'm not the first to say people should just give up on these. That is not something you ever hear around here, where people can generally fix anything.
That information is completely misleading. Have you tried one yourself? What experience do you have with them that authorises you to tell people to give up on them.
As I said, all the failures that I've heard of were on recumbents. Nothing to worry about on a normal bicycle.
I've been using them for over two years and done over 5000 miles. Before that, I tried every sort of motor. Now, I wouldn't have anything else. You don't need a wide choice of controllers if the ones that they supply do the job perfectly.
No, mine failed within a month on a normal bicycle and I wasn't bashing it, just climbing hills to and from work, so I doubt it has anything to do with recumbents at all . I replaced it with a mac500/1000 which has proven much more reliable (over 2500km now) and climbs hills like they don't even exist. But the country I live has 250w laws and the Xiongda would have been next best thing, if it was reliable.
cycleops612 said:Ta for sharing Bigoilbob. Many are interested am sure.
If u r right, u would think the silly bastards would invest in some upmarket grease? what on earth are they thinking? Would have to be the false economy of all time.
Other than the grease thing,I have yet to see any non "sample of one" evidence forthcoming of that rabid naysayers claims. They are news to me, and i have been watching them with mild interest for ~5 years.
Not sure if u said so, but i hear its a simple job to repack w/ grease folks.
bigoilbob said:cycleops612 said:Ta for sharing Bigoilbob. Many are interested am sure.
If u r right, u would think the silly bastards would invest in some upmarket grease? what on earth are they thinking? Would have to be the false economy of all time.
Other than the grease thing,I have yet to see any non "sample of one" evidence forthcoming of that rabid naysayers claims. They are news to me, and i have been watching them with mild interest for ~5 years.
Not sure if u said so, but i hear its a simple job to repack w/ grease folks.
cyclops, I'm not taking sides either. I respect glend's choice, and understand how someone reading threads can get cynical about the extra moving parts, and their quality. The might very well be right. And glend is having a good experience with his MAC. It's also a known psychological phenom that folks like me get anchored in our choices and are therefore biased.
The only thing that I'm convinced of is that this is a qualitatively better idea, and that it can be built and sold as a reliable, quality product. I can't yet say for sure that my unit represents an example of that.....
d8veh said:It's probably a motor hall sensor problem. Check that the 6-way connector from the motor wire to the controller is OK. Another cause I've seen is a cable-tie pulled too tight on the motor wire, which damaged it.
d8veh said:It's probably a motor hall sensor problem. Check that the 6-way connector from the motor wire to the controller is OK. Another cause I've seen is a cable-tie pulled too tight on the motor wire, which damaged it.