Great, thanks for sharing!
Hopefully all parts will be available for order again after Chinese holiday ends.
I will order from Bonnie / Xiongda directly
- 1 rear sensored YTW-06 motor
- KT Brushless Controller
Great, thanks for sharing!
Hopefully all parts will be available for order again after Chinese holiday ends.
I will order from Bonnie / Xiongda directly
- 1 rear sensored YTW-06 motor
- KT Brushless Controller
Well Bonnie sold me the KT Controller together with motors, cables and displays. It's the sensored version, maybe that's why?Bonnie told me that you can't use any KT controller.
Maybe try and hide it in the front gearset. Remove the small gears and fix it in there.This magnet ring is really ugly. There’re options to hide this in the bottom bracket, but they seem rather expensive.
Just a thought, would it interfere with the operation of the sensor to paint the magnets black? That would make it less obvious. And/or how about mounting the magnets directly to smallest chainring, without the ring they came in? That could make it pretty stealthy, if it worked.Maybe try and hide it in the front gearset. Remove the small gears and fix it in there.
http://www.pedelecs.co.uk/forum/threads/ebike-build-from-scratch.29930/#post-413883
I have four (actually 8 because 2 in each recess) magnets located in the smallest chainwheel and it seems to work fine. Make sure the magnet poles are all pointing the same way.Just a thought, would it interfere with the operation of the sensor to paint the magnets black? That would make it less obvious. And/or how about mounting the magnets directly to smallest chainring, without the ring they came in? That could make it pretty stealthy, if it worked.
Did you build the battery yourself? I have a spare bag like that and would love to use it for a battery, not sure I’m quite brave enough to self build a battery!Hello Everyone,
I’ve lurked here for a few months, reading many threads about various conversions in order to help plan my own build. Having now finished it, I thought I’d post the results on the basis it might be informative for others.
The donor bike is a Norco Indie 3 (2014) which has covered about 1500 miles. It’s a hybrid style bike with flat bars and 700C tyres. My normal fun ride is roughly 30 miles round trip, but miles 24 to 28 are a fairly constant incline that detracts from the pleasure of the rest of the ride. My thoughts were that a lightweight hub motor could be used to aid on the inclines without detracting from the normal pedal power on flatter sections (so a primary concern was not to add too much weight). Inspired by threads written by d8veh and AWOL, I decided to go with the small Xiongda YTW-06 as a front hub conversion.
I've taken a few photos of the build which I can post if I can work out how to! The finished article appears as my avatar. The bike weighed 12.1kg before I started, and the finished conversion came in at 16.5kg all up with a 36v 10S4P 11.6 Ah battery. Total cost excluding the donor bike worked out at £358 which I don't think is too bad.
What about these 20-cell batteries? They must be about 1kg and can fit in a bottle holder. There are loads of different bottle holders that fit anywhere on the bike.Did you build the battery yourself? I have a spare bag like that and would love to use it for a battery, not sure I’m quite brave enough to self build a battery!
I bought a 36v 11.6 aH pre-welded cell pack from ebay:Did you build the battery yourself? I have a spare bag like that and would love to use it for a battery, not sure I’m quite brave enough to self build a battery!