video: http://www.electricross.com/Video/SP Eric Swan 65 foot table 320x240.avi
nice 65feet jump with e-bike
for Nimh and Lipo..
what you said, is because of that 1C-2C thing !
with nowadays lipos its other way round !
we used very high quality NiMh cells in our rc-planes and rc-cars
(imagine: 70 Euro for 7,2Volt and 4,2Ah !)
but when it comes to power Lipos are superior nowadays !
you use the wrong batts on your bikes
here some data a rc-pilot measured about the Xcell4900:
http://www.elektromodellflug.de/akku-test/bilder/xcell4900.GIF
so: seriously: how much current do your bikes suck ?
when you use 36Volt
and lets say not more than 700Watt (i know, not legal anyway)
that would be 20A
ha... ridiculouse
10 Xcell in series will be able to give you 75A continously !!
(that would be 2600Watt Power !)
and such a pack would weight only 1.2kg !
and for voltage-drop: any NiMh you can get for e-bikes in the shops is A LOT worse and a lot heavier (or can you get 2600Watt out of your NiMh that ALSO weights only 1.2kg ? )
i think the video in this my post with the juming e-bike at first line of posting shows best what a lipo/liIon can do... and that battery in that bike weights only slightly more than a NiMH e-bike-battery-pack
nevertheless: its "only" a LiIon and not a Lipo... so there would still be more power possible
nice 65feet jump with e-bike
for Nimh and Lipo..
what you said, is because of that 1C-2C thing !
with nowadays lipos its other way round !
we used very high quality NiMh cells in our rc-planes and rc-cars
(imagine: 70 Euro for 7,2Volt and 4,2Ah !)
but when it comes to power Lipos are superior nowadays !
you use the wrong batts on your bikes
here some data a rc-pilot measured about the Xcell4900:
http://www.elektromodellflug.de/akku-test/bilder/xcell4900.GIF
so: seriously: how much current do your bikes suck ?
when you use 36Volt
and lets say not more than 700Watt (i know, not legal anyway)
that would be 20A
ha... ridiculouse
10 Xcell in series will be able to give you 75A continously !!
(that would be 2600Watt Power !)
and such a pack would weight only 1.2kg !
and for voltage-drop: any NiMh you can get for e-bikes in the shops is A LOT worse and a lot heavier (or can you get 2600Watt out of your NiMh that ALSO weights only 1.2kg ? )
i think the video in this my post with the juming e-bike at first line of posting shows best what a lipo/liIon can do... and that battery in that bike weights only slightly more than a NiMH e-bike-battery-pack
nevertheless: its "only" a LiIon and not a Lipo... so there would still be more power possible