Hi guys,
I have had a defunct euro 6 speed in the shed for about 6 months waiting for a diagnosis and repair but before I started on that I was hoping for some advice from the more knowledgable members about upgrading.
The root of the problem is that my daily ride to work involves 2 miles of hill, to be precise 1 mile at a gradient of approx 10-15% and 1 mile at 20%. When I first got the powabyke it was fine but a week of the hill and it could stand no more. Even with me helping we could barely manage 6mph up the hill.
So my question is: is there a way to increase the power of the bike without changing the hub motor? From a bit of browsing on the forum I have the idea that if I were to increase the voltage (ie to 48V) along with a commensurate upgrade in controller, this would give more power at the cost of a greater drain on the battery. Is this correct? if so will it damage the motor at all? do I need to drill holes in the hub for ventillation? can I simply put 4 12V batteries in series to achieve the 48V?
I am sure there are issues with this idea I have missed but if there were some way to increase the power it would great as I am changing the batteries anyway so it seems the best time to do other messing about.
Any help appriciated!
Cheers
I have had a defunct euro 6 speed in the shed for about 6 months waiting for a diagnosis and repair but before I started on that I was hoping for some advice from the more knowledgable members about upgrading.
The root of the problem is that my daily ride to work involves 2 miles of hill, to be precise 1 mile at a gradient of approx 10-15% and 1 mile at 20%. When I first got the powabyke it was fine but a week of the hill and it could stand no more. Even with me helping we could barely manage 6mph up the hill.
So my question is: is there a way to increase the power of the bike without changing the hub motor? From a bit of browsing on the forum I have the idea that if I were to increase the voltage (ie to 48V) along with a commensurate upgrade in controller, this would give more power at the cost of a greater drain on the battery. Is this correct? if so will it damage the motor at all? do I need to drill holes in the hub for ventillation? can I simply put 4 12V batteries in series to achieve the 48V?
I am sure there are issues with this idea I have missed but if there were some way to increase the power it would great as I am changing the batteries anyway so it seems the best time to do other messing about.
Any help appriciated!
Cheers