but the bear !!
the bear would not be cool anymore..
so -> lithium XX batts int he fridge is no good idea !
i wonder about your calculation:
are there charger-electronics, balancing-curcuits, etc. included ?
as said, my cells will give this:
37Volt (= 42Volt after charging) with 29,4Ah !! at only 4900g
(cabable of around 300A current continously and around 500-600A substain possible)
(in reality i would get (at 10C discharge) around 27Ah out of the batts..
then considere: if you only discharge to 80% for much longer battery-life, 20Ah-25Ah are usable)
on the other hand: this are still (for now 2 years) the lightest cells on the market (highpower-cells i know)
since then, for the last 2 years all manufactors seem to have started to make more powerfull cells (i know: 300A is powerful enough for a e-bike ), witch are now about 15-25% heavier, but also twice as powerfull and longer lifetime
for motors which where also mentioned: i have no experiences with such slow-turning motors and if there are still much improvments possible...
i have build some outrunners myself (up to 600Watt continous power and 1000Watt peak)...
at least for motor with high rpms (10.000rpm - 80.000rpm) i can say:
with 300g motor there are 500Watt continously and peaks to 2000Watt absolut no problem.. motor will not overheat
so i think - also the rpm on a bike are so much slower - that there should be still some potential...
2,5kg for only 250-500Watt sounds heavy to me...
for NiMh: are there any good chargers sold with the bikes as well ?
you can improve life of NiMh with some advanced charging-processes, like
Reflex-Charging
so there should also be an eye about this...
of course, such a charger will not be possible for 30-40 Euro..
but the 50-60Euro more payed for the charger, will be safed money on the longer living battery in the long-run
the bear would not be cool anymore..
so -> lithium XX batts int he fridge is no good idea !
i wonder about your calculation:
thats REALY heavy..The need for the eZee models that I use is 36 volt with a minimum of 10 Ah, but preferably about 13 Ah, weighing the same or less than the present Li-ion manganese 4.4 kilos.
are there charger-electronics, balancing-curcuits, etc. included ?
as said, my cells will give this:
37Volt (= 42Volt after charging) with 29,4Ah !! at only 4900g
(cabable of around 300A current continously and around 500-600A substain possible)
(in reality i would get (at 10C discharge) around 27Ah out of the batts..
then considere: if you only discharge to 80% for much longer battery-life, 20Ah-25Ah are usable)
on the other hand: this are still (for now 2 years) the lightest cells on the market (highpower-cells i know)
since then, for the last 2 years all manufactors seem to have started to make more powerfull cells (i know: 300A is powerful enough for a e-bike ), witch are now about 15-25% heavier, but also twice as powerfull and longer lifetime
for motors which where also mentioned: i have no experiences with such slow-turning motors and if there are still much improvments possible...
i have build some outrunners myself (up to 600Watt continous power and 1000Watt peak)...
at least for motor with high rpms (10.000rpm - 80.000rpm) i can say:
with 300g motor there are 500Watt continously and peaks to 2000Watt absolut no problem.. motor will not overheat
so i think - also the rpm on a bike are so much slower - that there should be still some potential...
2,5kg for only 250-500Watt sounds heavy to me...
for NiMh: are there any good chargers sold with the bikes as well ?
you can improve life of NiMh with some advanced charging-processes, like
Reflex-Charging
so there should also be an eye about this...
of course, such a charger will not be possible for 30-40 Euro..
but the 50-60Euro more payed for the charger, will be safed money on the longer living battery in the long-run