Controller is integrated in motor.Has anyone fitted this motor recently and if so how are you getting on with it? What controller and battery did you choose? Did you have any fitment issues or other teething issues?
Looks good.I just competed my first mid drive conversion with a TSDZ8. I used a 48v 17Ah battery from EM3EV.
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I just competed my first mid drive conversion with a TSDZ8. I used a 48v 17Ah battery from EM3EV.
The main challenge I had was with chainring and motor housing fouling the chainstay. I solved this with a chainring adapter from ebikestuff.eu and about 4mm of spacers for the bottom bracket. This meant the lock ring cover won’t fit so I used locktite on the lock ring. So far so good.
Another compromise with the chainring adapter is that offset compensation isn’t as good, so the chainline is fairly poor, althought it’s usable with the 8 speed drivettrain I installed.
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If you don't have that bracket thing that goes at the front of the chainstays, you can use a torque arm to lock the motor in position and take the strain off the locking ring. See here post#63:I just competed my first mid drive conversion with a TSDZ8. I used a 48v 17Ah battery from EM3EV.
The main challenge I had was with chainring and motor housing fouling the chainstay. I solved this with a chainring adapter from ebikestuff.eu and about 4mm of spacers for the bottom bracket. This meant the lock ring cover won’t fit so I used locktite on the lock ring. So far so good.
Another compromise with the chainring adapter is that offset compensation isn’t as good, so the chainline is fairly poor, althought it’s usable with the 8 speed drivettrain I installed.
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I'm really happy with it. Plenty of assistance up hills when needed, and then makes itself barely noticeable on the flat, and the torque sensing makes me feel like I've got super youthful energy. The range seems to be very good as well.Looks good.
...and? How do you like it?
Thanks for the tip - I tightened it as much as I possibly could and will keep checking it.Looks good. Very business like machine from the look of it.
Just a word on my experience with the locking nut. I have found mine has to be VERY tightly done up. Mine has started creaking a couple of times and by re-tightening the notched nut, the noise went away. Mine started creaking about three hundred miles after it was first built, then after a tweak to tighten it, it did it again after about another five hundred miles. The symptom was a sort of creaking sound when I pedalled it.
That's a nice piece of engineering - I might see if I can replicate thatIf you don't have that bracket thing that goes at the front of the chainstays, you can use a torque arm to lock the motor in position and take the strain off the locking ring. See here post#63:
New Project Started
I am confused now... are you going to use TSDZ2B and bike parts to make flat packed self assembling Ikea furniture?www.pedelecs.co.uk
Nice clean tidy build that, I like itI just competed my first mid drive conversion with a TSDZ8. I used a 48v 17Ah battery from EM3EV.
The main challenge I had was with chainring and motor housing fouling the chainstay. I solved this with a chainring adapter from ebikestuff.eu and about 4mm of spacers for the bottom bracket. This meant the lock ring cover won’t fit so I used locktite on the lock ring. So far so good.
Another compromise with the chainring adapter is that offset compensation isn’t as good, so the chainline is fairly poor, althought it’s usable with the 8 speed drivettrain I installed.
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Not me. I avoid rain if I can help it.Had anyone done anything to help prevent water ingress particularly with the cable from the battery to the motor? Heat shrink, dielectric grease, silicone sealant?
I was considering using threadlocker, but Seneagle said to whack spanner few times with a hammer, so I did just that.Are people using thread locker on the locking nut and crank arm bolts?
I wrapped a tea towel around the Bafang tool handle and used freakish brute strength. Overtightening led to increased motor resistance, so I slackened it off a tiny bit. After the nut loosened a few hundred miles later, I tightened it a tiny bit more than a did the first time, and it's been fine for thousands of miles since. No threadlocker.Are people using thread locker on the locking nut and crank arm bolts?
@vantage obliterated his balls:I once read that over tightening the big notched nut on the BBS*** series can damage bearings in the housing. I think this would require silly amounts of tightening though. The torque wrench is your friend on things like that I suppose, though I have never used the one I bought, since 1990, when I was messing about with a kit car.
Are you sure that the power is proportional to the pedal force from the torque sensor? The TSDZ2 doesn't work like that at all. As far as I can figure out, it has two power levels for each setting on the LCD. You get a low level of power as soon as you press the pedal, and a higher level when you cross some torque threshold. The higher the pedal assist setting, the more you can feel/see it. I would have thought that the TSDZ8 would be similar.Just been out for my first ride after fitting this kit. Once I had realised that I had cable tied my derailleur cable to the frame (doh) it was like bringing a gun to a knife fight after taking a couple of lines of coke (or how I imagine that might feel).
Eco mode just about overcomes the mass of the motor and battery but I felt almost superhuman in tour mode. The best bit for me was the torque sensor. The more effort you put in the more power you get back and I was absolutely flying up hills. I overtook a bloke on a emtb and two guys on MTBs going up one hill like they were standing still. I did not use power modes 3-4 as I still wanted some exercise and suspect they might be overkill.
In terms of downsides the bike is now pretty heavy and I would not fancy lifting it over gates etc and I suspect this will affect the handling off road. May be I should have not bought a 20Ah battery!
I have nowhere to store a water bottle on my frame, so need to look at my options. I need to buy some glasses as I was getting hit by bugs at 35mph plus downhill. For a first ride I was very impressed. Let's hope it gets better still.
Time to buy a CamelBak.I have nowhere to store a water bottle on my frame, so need to look at my options.