It's all relative. The hotter builds over at Endless Sphere are reaching the 25-30kW mark.I'll get my coat . . .
It's all relative. The hotter builds over at Endless Sphere are reaching the 25-30kW mark.I'll get my coat . . .
It all sounds a lot more complicated than I thought originally. And I can't find anyone who does conversion/custom e-bikes for a fee.Firstly, don't buy a new bike as it'll be a waste of money. As soon as you start to modify it, the warranty will be worthless. You'll need a decent full suspension bike which you should look for used. Even then, you'll struggle to find one with sufficient space to mount such a large battery.
Although it would probably just about do the job, IMO that battery isn't powerful enough for what the motor will really want. Minimum 80A continuous for £1K is a more realistic figure:
https://em3ev.com/shop/em3ev-72v-20s10p-rectangle-battery-pack-24-5ah-29-5ah/?currency=USD
Controller £2-300
Cycle Analyst £160
Suitable bike £500-1000
Miscellaneous costs £200
You should also seriously consider using moped rims & tyres at these power levels, since bicycle wheels & tyres are not built for the task. Add another £300.
Add another £150 for a full face helmet and the same again for additional protective gear.
It all mounts up.
You lost me there. I think I better find a kit that includes the battery, controller and motor so I know they match. So far, I have had some nice suggestions for people on this forum. bikes.ca seems legit so does EMVOk, so to get 3000w from your MXUS motor you will need to run it with a min. 50 amp controller. Your battery is spec'd to supply 50amp continuous, great, BUT the cells in the battery are only spec'd to supply 8 amp max. current. This means that you will be maxing that battery out most of the time, it will get hot and fail or catch fire. You need a battery pack made of cells that can deliver 20 amps con. Give Jimmy at BGA a call and he can spec. you a battery that will do the job. Prob. around 1k.
It's not complicated, but experience counts for a lot.It all sounds a lot more complicated than I thought originally. And I can't find anyone who does conversion/custom e-bikes for a fee.
You might want to look here:It all sounds a lot more complicated than I thought originally. And I can't find anyone who does conversion/custom e-bikes for a fee.
I know very little about e-bikes and e-mtb's but I know a bit about mtb and there is NO WAY I would want to ride a £500 Halfords mtb at 50mph. Thats why these things are over £5k@danielrlee
I found these online.
3000w MXUS Rear hub motor : 380 EUR
72v/25AH Battery pack : 650 GBP
Am I missing something? How did you get to £3000? Plus the battery above is triangular and can probably fit in the frame of a standard MTB (which I buy new from Halfords for around £500)
You forgot the charger dan @ about £87Firstly, don't buy a new bike as it'll be a waste of money. As soon as you start to modify it, the warranty will be worthless. You'll need a decent full suspension bike which you should look for used. Even then, you'll struggle to find one with sufficient space to mount such a large battery.
Although it would probably just about do the job, IMO that battery isn't powerful enough for what the motor will really want. Minimum 80A continuous for £1K is a more realistic figure:
https://em3ev.com/shop/em3ev-72v-20s10p-rectangle-battery-pack-24-5ah-29-5ah/?currency=USD
Controller £2-300
Cycle Analyst £160
Suitable bike £500-1000
Miscellaneous costs £200
You should also seriously consider using moped rims & tyres at these power levels, since bicycle wheels & tyres are not built for the task. Add another £300.
Add another £150 for a full face helmet and the same again for additional protective gear.
It all mounts up.
Looks great. Get a couple of oars and you can sail it down Thames.If you want to go fast you need to remove your major enemy - air resistance.
View attachment 24279
This is a home made all wood velomobile and the young, fit German guy that designed and built it cruises at 65 km/h on the flat with a top recorded speed of around 92 km/h. Without a motor...
Put any 250/350W mid motor in there with a huge chainwheel (he was running 70-56 last time I read) and you to can go fast on the road.
If you want an electric fun machine for off road: https://www.bultaco.com/en/motos
Heh that made me chuckleLooks great. Get a couple of oars and you can sail it down Thames.
A 36v "250" W GSM will do 45-47 km/h on a flat road unrestricted, add a 48v battery it will probably climb hills at 35 km/h (I'll report back when I get the controller sorted).Heh that made me chuckle
On the bike point, gotta agree with posters here. I had a Norco A line to try and repair the other day. With a 3k mxus hub and all the stuff. It weighed a simply incredible amount. It simply wasn't a bicycle in any respect. It also didn't work and failed to deliver what the owner wanted. They simply saw more power = better
What the owner actually wanted to achieve was better done via a decent full suss bike with large rotors and a bbshd mid drive . I suspect you want this too but maybe with just a hardtail over a full suss
Cheaper and better in every respect other than playing ebike Top Trumps
And strapping a bbshd into a Halfords cheapo is possible. But why ? you can stick a Porsche engine in an vw beetle but it's rubbish for anything but a drag race. Achieve little, massive cost !
Try and find a bbshd to try . You won't need more. I have a Bbs02b and that is more than enough on my titanium hardtail
Yep, I'm sure it will. I have one with the internal controller on my 29erA 36v "250" W GSM will do 45-47 km/h on a flat road unrestricted, add a 48v battery it will probably climb hills at 35 km/h (I'll report back when I get the controller sorted).