Trex
Looking at your photo. Is it hinged in the middle at the base of the seat post/crank ?
I cannot believe that that would do anything but wobble and rock. Sea sick on a bike?
It would incidentally reduce pedalling efficiency too?
apologies if this is a serious derailing (a break in work caused it) - but that got me thinking about efficiency - what is teh most efficient speed ot run an electric motor in a pedelec at? i came accross this:
This is actually not really true. A very basic electric motor has 100% torque through about half its operating range, and then 100% power through the rest. That's not exactly true, but it's pretty close.
Basically you start out with 100% torque and 0% power. The power climbs to 100% through approximately the first half of the revs, then the power stays constant and the torque falls off. At some point the torque falls to zero, at which point the motor can no longer spin any faster.
Very simply put, this is because torque depends on current which is limited by heat, and power depends on torque and RPM, where RPM is limited by the dielectric strength of the windings. At first you're torque-limited because pumping more current through the motor will simply melt it, and then later you're rpm/power limited because increasing the voltage will cause the windings to short out.
EDIT:
here is a good diagram showing the constant-torque (red) and constant-power (blue) halves of an electric motor's performance envelope. Note that this is peak power. The green line is 100% duty power (motor continuously running) which is the power output the motor can cope with indefinitely given the expected level of cooling available. Not shown is the 100% duty torque line, but that can be derived from the power curve since power is basically torque*rpm.
However, yes, electric motors are much more suitable for cars than piston engines.
here:
http://www.reddit.com/r/askscience/comments/1j5qay/why_arent_twostroke_diesel_engines_more_popular/
and it's kindof interesting - given something like teh oxydrive 350w hub motor kit - if you wanted to achieve optimum efficiency, woudl you operate at say 20mph (peak power, little torque) or more around 12 plus mph (peak torque little power)?