Yes I got an email from Tony telling me that he could do a 700c freewheel motor. I'm still considering all options. Thanks.hello John,
I haven't got a cassette motor in 29".
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Yes I got an email from Tony telling me that he could do a 700c freewheel motor. I'm still considering all options. Thanks.hello John,
I haven't got a cassette motor in 29".
From memory, I don't remember having to stretch anything to fit a BPM fitted with a DNP 8-speed 11T-32T freewheel to a bike that had a cassette.Nothing is easy. The problem with the 8-speed freewheels is that they make your axle too wide on one side. that means you have to dish your wheel or put spacers on the other side of your axle. With the spacers, the disc won't line up with the caliper, so you need to deal with that, plus the hole lot is wide, so you have to stretch the frame a bit. 7-speed is much easier, but then your gears don't index properly.
Basically, if you have an 8 speed cassette, you should use a cassette motor. All the time, you're trying to make do with what is available. It would be much better to get the right stuff.
I've fitted several BPMs with 7-speed. They all needed dishing. When you fit an 8-speed, you need a spacer on the axle on the drive side to stop top gear from touching the frame. That increases the off-set.From memory, I don't remember having to stretch anything to fit a BPM fitted with a DNP 8-speed 11T-32T freewheel to a bike that had a cassette.
For those who are interested, the thickness and gap between the cogs are the same standard for the DNP and Shimano 8-speed HG50, you don't need to touch the derailleur.
One thing to note though, the BPM requires a 180mm rotor.
It looks like he's used two washers on the axle, so his offset would be bigger than with a 7 speed. Is his rim central in the frame?Here are some pictures from johny's thread, he converted his bike (which had a cassette) with using a woosh kit, with SWX02 and DNP 8-speed screw on freewheel:
http://pedelecs.co.uk/forum/threads/cant-decide-what-kit-to-buy.27858/page-3
Lol D8veh you're right! I'm whacking my brain trying to find a kit/setup that is close at hand. Maybe I should bite the bullet and order what you described as "ebike nirvana" from BMSB. I'll review that option again.Nothing is easy. The problem with the 8-speed freewheels is that they make your axle too wide on one side. that means you have to dish your wheel or put spacers on the other side of your axle. With the spacers, the disc won't line up with the caliper, so you need to deal with that, plus the hole lot is wide, so you have to stretch the frame a bit. 7-speed is much easier, but then your gears don't index properly.
Basically, if you have an 8 speed cassette, you should use a cassette motor. All the time, you're trying to make do with what is available. It would be much better to get the right stuff.
It seems that the factory does it with an extra washer:If i were designing an OEM frame, I'd offset the frame on that side, so it wouldn't be a problem, but on a normal symmetrical bicycle frame, you have to deal with the off-set somehow.
5mm, taking the 43.5 at the bottom and half of the 40mm between flange centre lines gives 63.5, take this away from the 68.5 centres between the nuts gives 5mm offset.I've fitted several BPMs with 7-speed. They all needed dishing. When you fit an 8-speed, you need a spacer on the axle on the drive side to stop top gear from touching the frame. That increases the off-set.
You can see the off-set in this drawing, though they don't say what it is. If i were designing an OEM frame, I'd offset the frame on that side, so it wouldn't be a problem, but on a normal symmetrical bicycle frame, you have to deal with the off-set somehow.