I've been running a bafang hub motor on 36v for a while now and it gives me reasonable low speed performance and tops out around 20mph which is ok but I would like a higher top speed.
If I upgrade my battery to 48v this will give me a higher top speed but I think I'm right in saying this will effectively move the efficiency range to higher rpm and reduce my low speed performance (heating up and straining the motor).
I have considered a mid drive but my commute involves quite a bit of flood water and I'm not great at keeping on top of drivetrain maintenance and i like how reliable my hub motor is.
I've been wondering for a while whether it is possible to put a 12v battery on my bike that I can turn on with a switch when I'm up to the top speed for 36v (20mph) to make it 48v and allow the motor to spin faster. Effectively giving the bike a second gear without straining the motor at low speed.
I'm pretty sure this would work by using a SPDT relay to add the 12v battery to the 36v battery to supply the controller with 48v.
My controller is up to it, its a 25A 36v/48v kt controller with 63v capacitors in it so it will survive the voltage.
I will be treating the 36v and 12 v batteries separately so they will have their own BMS and I will charge them separately.
I'm just after more electronically experienced people to tell me if this is viable or impossible before I waste time and money in trying it out.
If I upgrade my battery to 48v this will give me a higher top speed but I think I'm right in saying this will effectively move the efficiency range to higher rpm and reduce my low speed performance (heating up and straining the motor).
I have considered a mid drive but my commute involves quite a bit of flood water and I'm not great at keeping on top of drivetrain maintenance and i like how reliable my hub motor is.
I've been wondering for a while whether it is possible to put a 12v battery on my bike that I can turn on with a switch when I'm up to the top speed for 36v (20mph) to make it 48v and allow the motor to spin faster. Effectively giving the bike a second gear without straining the motor at low speed.
I'm pretty sure this would work by using a SPDT relay to add the 12v battery to the 36v battery to supply the controller with 48v.
My controller is up to it, its a 25A 36v/48v kt controller with 63v capacitors in it so it will survive the voltage.
I will be treating the 36v and 12 v batteries separately so they will have their own BMS and I will charge them separately.
I'm just after more electronically experienced people to tell me if this is viable or impossible before I waste time and money in trying it out.