It's good yours feels great at 14a.14A, (S06S)
Done!
It was easy. You just have to forget what you previously learned and start all-over again
How many of those miles are hills to climb?Hello! I'm new to the forum (and electrics)and I've been following this thread, as the Q100h setup described seems ideal to help us up the hills with our tandem. (A Dawes Double Edge) I've had wheel-building experience, but I'd be glad of some help with putting it all together!
I'm assuming I should order the lower rpm version of the motor as we need high torque (two people on board) rather than high speed?
We're regular riders, but reaching the age now where climbing gets harder. We're used to riding distances up to 60 miles or so and would want a battery with enough capacity to cope with this - so what size battery would you suggest and what other equipment to go with it?
Thanks in advance.
I would consider middrive in case it would fit your tandem. A little more expensive but climbs mountains really great. If you feel that is an important factor. With hub motors you need to lower the assist if you have a looong uphill, otherwise you burn the controller. But it works good that too.
Personally I like both hub motors and middrives but they have their cons and pros so it is not a certain thing to choose.
The problem with assistance is you get lazy... If you want to go far with a small battery you turn the assistance down to level 0 everywhere except when you are climbing the steepest hills. In that case you would need a battery capable of 6 miles Why level 0 and not off? Because in level 0 you still have your speedo and odometer functions and trip time!I suppose in all honesty, the hills are no more than 10% of the total ride, even in quite a hilly area, but of course you always remember the hardest bits!
Our tandem is a Dawes Galaxy Twin, about 10 years old now (Sorry, the Double Edge was our previous tandem, a late night mental block!)
I'd decided already to go for a front hub motor, as per the original post, for the sake of simplicity. We've often been on tour with front panniers that weigh together probably around 10 Kilos, so I don't see the extra weight being a problem.
No, unless you have a controller which is set to speed control rather than power control? In the first case you are topping out on speed, in the second case assistance level 5 is 15 Amps, level 4 is 7.5 Amps and so on so you would feel the power doubling at each level change. It is hard to feel the difference in change on the lower levels but you definitely feel a difference between 3 and 5.We mostly ride on assistance 2 of 5, and go up to 3 of 5 on the hills. Don't seem to get much extra oomph on 4/5 or 5/5 on hills, we are probably maxing out what the battery and controller can deliver even on 3.
The longer wheelbase might have a lot to do with that as well as the weight of two people (even light) rather than one holding the front wheel down.We haven't had any front wheel slip issues (one possible problem with front hub motors) and there have been a few cases where the fact that it drives the front and we drive the back has helped.
Thanks for the comment: I will try going direct from 3 to 5. We are typically going 8 mph on hills, less on steeper ones, so power is also limited by the torque/power the motor can provide at those speeds. I'd love to have a clear model in my head about the various interactions of battery/controller/settings/motor/speed.It is hard to feel the difference in change on the lower levels but you definitely feel a difference between 3 and 5.
ok, but that sounds good then. I rode my new Q100H a long ride today and it really is great. This motor + battery weighs not too much. My ebike is like an old push steel bikeI'd decided already to go for a front hub motor, as per the original post, for the sake of simplicity. We've often been on tour with front panniers that weigh together probably around 10 Kilos, so I don't see the extra weight being a problem.
Often almost the same motor gets given different labelled power ratings. The nominal labelled rating is a continuous rating, the max a motor gives is quite a lot more than the nominal. Technically a kit labelled 350w is not legal on road as a pedalec (UK)
http://wooshbikes.co.uk/?hubkits#frontbpmkit is a 350w front kit. You'll see a couple of pictures of (somebody else's) tandem conversion with that kit near the bottom of that page. I think their rear SWX 48v 250w is actually as powerful as the 350 BPM (??? they will advise).
I'd recommend Woosh from our experience, and they will give you plenty of advice too.