when I first came here to the forum, I thought i need a bike, were the motor can use the gears..
Point 1:
everywhere you heard, that Hubmotors do not run efficient at hills, and are not at all suitable for going up hills
well.. part of that is right,
but as flecc wrote in his article:
we are not driving E-Bikes, we are driving "Hyprids"...
there is the motor, and there is the human
and the human can still use the gears !
i have an Bafang 24V 180Watt Motor in my bike,
powering it from 36Volt-Batteries with an 14A controller
tires are 26"x2,35" BigApple
this little beast is a fast motor as this video may show:
Video YouTube - Bafang Speedtest 50km/h
on this video, a "booster"-pack was used (2s Lipos with 7,4Volt)
the voltage on load was about 41Volt
so: its a little fast motor, not realy a torque-monster with that setup
i tested the torque: hills with 9% without pedaling are NOT possible
(20kg bike, 78kg driver -> so ~100kg)
nevertheless:
here are some videos of doing hills from 30% - 40% as an hyprid mashine (motor + human)
some datas:
temperature in the shadow was -8°C rising to -5°C during filming
the tires are Big Apples, roadtires, not realy suitable for heavy offroad-use
Video1: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt
the slope at the end of the hill is 38%, with motor doable, without motor (second try) not
the slope in the video-center-position: 34%
###############
Video2: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt Part 2
there are slippery leaves/foliage
first with motor -> its easily doable
then two tries without motor and not so good results
###############
Video3: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt Part 3
first with motor
second without motor
i use noose/straps/loop on the pedals, so a little accident on that video happend
###############
video4: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt Part 4
doing a hill with only one hand on the handle-bar, the other one in the air
first with motor -> no problem
then without motor.. you see, very soon i have to use both arms
the slope when driving behind the dog and on the right side i have measured with 21% and 23%
on the left side the slop goes up, up to 38%
###############
video5:
30% rising to 38% slope
i have measured, were i actually was driving, not somewere else on the slope
Point 2:
another thing i have often read: you can´t go offroad with an front-hub, you need a reardrive (rearhub, or drive through gears) for that,
because the front-hub will spin and spin and spin, of absolut no use because front wheel is lifted
i think the videos should show, that also with a fronthub, which results in a all-wheel-drive, going up hills is doable
(as said, the motor is no torque-monster)
the bike is geard 18:18 in first gear, which is too fast for my leg-power and the hill-grades
the motor is not able to do 9% for its own, but is nevertheless a great help at even steep hills
i think with this road-tires on the video and a REAR-motor i would not have the same good results climbing hills,
because all the torque would go to the rear-wheel, resulting in
so..
maybe this was interesting or funny to watch for some..
greets,
Reini
Point 1:
everywhere you heard, that Hubmotors do not run efficient at hills, and are not at all suitable for going up hills
well.. part of that is right,
but as flecc wrote in his article:
we are not driving E-Bikes, we are driving "Hyprids"...
there is the motor, and there is the human
and the human can still use the gears !
i have an Bafang 24V 180Watt Motor in my bike,
powering it from 36Volt-Batteries with an 14A controller
tires are 26"x2,35" BigApple
this little beast is a fast motor as this video may show:
Video YouTube - Bafang Speedtest 50km/h
on this video, a "booster"-pack was used (2s Lipos with 7,4Volt)
the voltage on load was about 41Volt
so: its a little fast motor, not realy a torque-monster with that setup
i tested the torque: hills with 9% without pedaling are NOT possible
(20kg bike, 78kg driver -> so ~100kg)
nevertheless:
here are some videos of doing hills from 30% - 40% as an hyprid mashine (motor + human)
some datas:
temperature in the shadow was -8°C rising to -5°C during filming
the tires are Big Apples, roadtires, not realy suitable for heavy offroad-use
Video1: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt
the slope at the end of the hill is 38%, with motor doable, without motor (second try) not
the slope in the video-center-position: 34%
###############
Video2: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt Part 2
there are slippery leaves/foliage
first with motor -> its easily doable
then two tries without motor and not so good results
###############
Video3: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt Part 3
first with motor
second without motor
i use noose/straps/loop on the pedals, so a little accident on that video happend
###############
video4: YouTube - Bafang Bergfahrt Part 4
doing a hill with only one hand on the handle-bar, the other one in the air
first with motor -> no problem
then without motor.. you see, very soon i have to use both arms
the slope when driving behind the dog and on the right side i have measured with 21% and 23%
on the left side the slop goes up, up to 38%
###############
video5:
30% rising to 38% slope
i have measured, were i actually was driving, not somewere else on the slope
Point 2:
another thing i have often read: you can´t go offroad with an front-hub, you need a reardrive (rearhub, or drive through gears) for that,
because the front-hub will spin and spin and spin, of absolut no use because front wheel is lifted
i think the videos should show, that also with a fronthub, which results in a all-wheel-drive, going up hills is doable
(as said, the motor is no torque-monster)
the bike is geard 18:18 in first gear, which is too fast for my leg-power and the hill-grades
the motor is not able to do 9% for its own, but is nevertheless a great help at even steep hills
i think with this road-tires on the video and a REAR-motor i would not have the same good results climbing hills,
because all the torque would go to the rear-wheel, resulting in
- lifting up the front more easily
- loosing traktion on the rear more easily
- weight-distributation would be worse with an rear-hub (see also point 1)
so..
maybe this was interesting or funny to watch for some..
greets,
Reini