Well if I were you, I'd replace the controller with a 36V-48V one.. upgrade your gears to 11T and a big chainwheel 52T or bigger, and that should take you up to 20mph-22mph zone,..unless you/your bike weighs a ton. You can over volt the motor..gearing works wonders, you should try that now if you're having trouble keeping up with motor at full whack..you'd be surprised the difference it can make.I'm looking to get the speed to 20mph, distance isn't a issue. This is or off road purposes so no law breaking
Controllers are so cheap (< tenner?) may as well just play it safe and replace it for 48V rated...you can even sell that 24V one and recoup some of the cost eh.Using 48 volts will increase your speed by one third, to 20 mph as you want. As d8veh says though, it's debatable whether you present controller will accept that, so you may need the 48 volt controller.
I would say you would do 20mph easy on 48V, depending on the watts rating of motor and Ah rating of battery...you got to think how far you want to travel, if there's hills etc.. that looks a heavy bike so you may not be able to maintain that speed for long unless your battery has the capacity?
This is my bike, so if I upgrade controller to 48v and fit a 48v battery, without gearing bike I should get 20mph on a flat surface I currently get 15? From motor power only. My main concern is not to smoke the motor for when I put it back to standard
Are these controllers easy enough to wire into place of current original wiring loom.
Well since they're so cheap its worth risking under normal circumstances eh. But the thing is, this bike doesn't look like a regular e-bike.. and if it blows up and he needs to replace it, could be costly if parts aren't readily available and/or he can't adapt this bike to an BMS Battery controller? That's why I'd be more inclined to take it out and put it to one side and try and upgrade approach..its gonna cost £15-£20 quid?Without knowing the 36v controller wot you have, its not possible to guarantee that all will be 100%
However.... I'd stick 48v up it
Unless the off road riding is only on private land from which the public are excluded (difficult to find now, under the "right to roam" legislation) then using a non-approved electric bike will be technically illegal.I'm looking to get the speed to 20mph, distance isn't a issue. This is for off road purposes so no law breaking
Your bike looks immaculate unless that's an earlier pic? You looked after it well.I think I have a 250w brushed motor in it. I'm goin to remove controller, post sum pics and go from their
Neat, you got a bargain at that price. Did you test out the range it can do yet? I assume the speed is legally restricted to the 15mph in that controller as you said you can do 15mph max.. perhaps there's a potential for it to go faster on the existing battery if you could "de-restrict" it from 15mph and make it go faster without needing to pump more volts in? 24v packs less punch usually, but some more conventional looking bikes of this brand (I think) I've seen can really move still and perform well on 24v...for a heavy bike like this probably would be a case of upping the voltage to get more from the motor.. I hope someone can identify the controller and/or the motor for you and tell us more about the performance and spec potential. That motor does look quite big for 250W don't it? Must be a loads of latent potential in it.That was the pic I took when I got it home couple of months ago, purchased off an old guy for £220, he bought it new hardly used it as it was too heavy to lift on his motor home bike rack. Then bought a foldable version