How To Make an Electric Bike Part 6 www.comcycle-usa.com
Uploader Comments (ComCycleUSA)
All Comments (48)
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Magnets are simply amazing, but you did know that these magnets also can give electricity?
I saw a magnet wheel with generator attached spinning up to 6000 rpm and it managed to squeeze out 100 volts quite easily.
I'm currently stocking up to do some experiments on magnets and multiple configurations and i suspect this could easily replace any batteries of today.
I think i'm pretty close to not being dependent on batteries, in theory that is.
Everyone want to save money so i'll try do just that
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Did anyone actualy make a bike using this? :P
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how fast does this bike go on a flat straight?
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Where might i be able to buy these parts? By these parts i mean the Electric Hub Motor, Throttle, Controller, and Lithium Polymer Battery. I'd really like to undergo a project similar to this, hopefully in a cost-effective way.
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i want to put this on me bike LOL
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What about 2 kits for 1 bike, 1 electric motor per wheel. It would create a heap of power and still be fairly light.
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@ComCycleUSA okay thank you very much!
You can get a lot of High quality E-bike parts from Busettii electric bikes in LA. They ahve the really long range and higher speed stuff. I ride a Busettii Bike and it gets about 55 miles of riding on one charge unless I ride it at the top speed of 27 mph then it only gets about 35 miles per charge. Rainbow
doubletriplerainbow 5 months ago
@doubletriplerainbow I don't know for sure, but BMC is an OEM supplier to many eBike makers (like Currie, for example). I don't think anyone OEMs these particular motors, but I could be wrong about that.
ComCycleUSA 4 months ago
what if it rains?
arashogfar 8 months ago
@arashogfar These are not waterproof, but they can handle a little wet. For real rain riding, you need to waterproof the bike.
ComCycleUSA 8 months ago 3
hey wait i thought that a motor had positive and negative not those other names you called those two leads that came out from the motor
animator909 2 years ago
@animator909 Brushed motors have two leads. This is a brushless motor, it has a total of 8 leads. 3 leads are the phase wires, and the other 5 are for the hall sensors. Nearly all brushless motors work this way. There is a new generation starting to come out that is brushless and does not use hall sensors. Such motors only have 3 phase wires. Like I mention somewhere, this stuff is changing pretty fast right now.
ComCycleUSA 1 year ago