The amount of experience and knowledge that is conveyed on this channel is incredibly useful and helpful and it has saved me from making some very costly mistakes (time and money) that I otherwise would have made if I hadn’t watched the related videos on this channel first. If you have a question or a problem related to mid drive motors, chances are it’s been discussed on this channel. It’s really appreciated and thank you, great channel!!
6000+ Road miles on my BBSHD and I finally had to replace the Nylon Pinion drive gear. Not because of heat damage but because of wear. I don't climb any really steep hills with it(it's an Urban warrior/commuter in a relatively flat city) so I spin a lot of RPM to stay around 30-35mph on the busier streets. Replaced it with the PEEK gear just to help extend it's life because of wear... and piece of mind. Specifics: It started life driving an 8 speed cassette(Shimano HG51-bf group) with a 42t Bafang chain ring. Around 4000 miles on the motor I changed it up. Now it drives a Nexus Inter-5e with 27t Sprocket and a Lekkie 40t HD chain ring(2mm spacer behind it). The switch to the Lekkie was to correct the chain line to the IGH and keep the same 1st gear ratio. Chain line is strait as an arrow now. 1st gear on the Nexus Inter-5e is 1:1, so for those doing the math that puts me at 1.48:1 ratio in 1st gear. Which interestingly enough is nearly the same starting ratio I used in 1st gear on my HG51 cassette/42t setup which was 1.5:1. 5th gear on the IGH however is a HUGE 3.9:1 final ratio. I never use it... unless I'm riding down grade. It's larger than the 8th gear ratio(42:11, that I never used) on my cassette setup. 7th gear was 3.5:1 as it was and could easily hold me at 30mph with power set to 90% on 52v. Yes, I've reprogrammed the power levels in the stock controller.
Just as a side comment this video is mostly useful for those people who are using a controller which allows for field weakening of the motor. Normally motors don't spin up to 13000 rpm so a one to one gear ratio is really only useful if field weakening is used! I know you mentioned this in the video but it is important and bears repeating! I set up the high voltage kit on a shimano Alfine geared hub and the first time I rode it I could hardly keep the wheel on the ground. The Alfine in the lowest gear is very low! Besides the fact I think I broke two spokes in the process I quickly changed it out for a cassette which I locked to the lowest gear as the Alfine would not take that kind of power without destroying itself! This video is really for single speed setup as far as a drivetrain goes! Keep up the good work!
Good points and thanks for adding on. The video is mainly for people using the higher power stuff but I wanted to get over the idea that any mid drive will wear much faster in the wrong gear. Appreciate the comment. Yikes on the hub. Must have been quite a shock!
I appreciate your explanation, it's simple enough most I think can understand this. I'll definitely forward your video to others in my community, the human body analogy is a good one.
Great video John. I have a BBS02 with 44 front and 14 34 rear and a BBSHD with 42 front and 11 42 rear. no problems at all with overheating or the nylon gear but I do as you advise use the gears correctly and keep it spinning uphills. Both running 48 V so not overstressing at all. Still important to be in the correct gear mind you.
Hi John, I'm glad you mentioned that you still have your nylon gear. I was quite concerned about this on my recumbent trike as I have the HV upgrade kit without the peek gear. I will take my BBSHD motor apart and regrease it before putting the trike back on the road. Great video, by the way.
Thanks you are most welcome. Watch the RPMs and watts and see what you are getting. You might want to go a bit more safe than 1:1. I doubt you need to worry about wheelies so you could use a 32t up front. I expect chain line is not an issue either. Love to see some photos of this build on Discord.
@Rick Sanchez , I don't have any gears to change as this is a single rear 42 tooth gear. 1 to 1 ratio, but Captain Codswallop is suggesting a smaller front gear.
Good video, John. You have a good radio voice, and you explain things clearly. Problem with Bafang mid drives is getting a small enough chain wheel on the front and having a decent chainline. I have a 42 tooth lekkie knockoff on the front, anything smaller gives a horrendous chain line. It would be nice to have a 32 or smaller on the front for trail riding. Not really interested in speed, it s a bicycle not a motorcycle.
My bbshd is also more than 5 years old and still ok, 2 times I opened it to clean and grease. Mileage is about 9000-10000 km per year, full throttle all the time, 52v battery.
Yes and I am sure that is why Bafang chose it. Lots of motor companies use them for the same reason. People see it as a weak point but its not. Its to fail first. Great comment! Cheers
I've finally got my build together enough to test it and see how it runs but for now I'm stuck with a 46 tooth crank gear that came with the motor. Any other gear that sits any closer or is a smaller diameter will hit the frame. The bike Ive installed it on has a 7 speed shimano with the largest gear being a 28 T. Something has to be changed. I took it for a quick spin and hit 45 mph and put it away. It was plenty warm
@@HighVoltageKits I think I'm going to consider an entire new rear end. Would you know if any of the IGHs would be on the lower side. Obviously I don't need higher gears if it's going to burn me up. Or am I faced with findinding a way to space a smaller gear on my crank out away from the frame? Those are my starting points.
I would post this on discord with photos. I am not too sure of the various igh ratios. You would definitely benefit from posting pics and video clips here.
Good video, thanks for the info.. I’m waiting to get my cyc x1 gen4 and I’m trying to get as much knowledge about it as possible before installing it. I don’t want to be the reason something happens lol
Thank you, I will definitely be joining the discord community, Im just finishing up my 72v x1 pro gen4 build on my Specialized fuse 6fattie and I can’t tell you how much help this channel has been. It’s saved me a great deal of headaches I can assure you lol and theres still a lot of up grades and mods I want to do in the future. My close friends and family say I’m obsessed with riding and building e-bikes but I prefer to call it passionate 😂
Also in your opinion, does the x1 pro gen4 rotor magnets now being mechanically secured instead of being glued on, as well as the over all increase in length potentially solve a lot of the issues that have been seen in previous gen’s? Like rotor/magnet failure at higher rpm’s and motor temp because of increased heat dissipation with the increase in length?
I have a 46 tooth in the front and 16 tooth on the back with my 8 speed i.g.h i keep it in 4 gear or 5 gear and its good i have had my bbshd 3 years and i have a 3300 watt controller on it.
I finally built my KTM fatbike and went for my first ride, blew the nylon gear after 10 minutes. 2800 Watts, full throttle, 80km/h BBSHD 46T up front and 14 in the back...LOL, I didn't know about this video, now I do.....
Nice video John..if only some one could Bolt à 3 speed gearbox on the BBSHD and have a gates belt life would be perfect..ps next time talk about stress on the drive chain...anyway keep up the good work many newbies will learn from our mistakes. 👌👌👍👍
Original nylon gear on mine and not a single issue. Just remember to gear for torque as much as possible, especially if you are on less than a 72v setup.
Thanks for that explanation. I ride a recumbent trike on a regular basis. I started with a Bionx Hub Motor which lasted me about 6 years of trouble-free riding. Then I fitted a Bafang BBS02B Mid Drive motor which blew my mind with its power and acceleration. But it only lasted for about 4000 km and kept getting very hot. Now the acceleration was such that I tended to change up gears by 2 or 3 at a time to keep up and after a few minutes, I was in top gear and doing about 35kph. I was still pedalling only because I used a 65T chainring which allowed me to pedal up to say 50kph. As my small (top gear) was about 11t, you are going to tell me that I blew up the motor because of my large chainring! Well, what is the answer if I want high-speed cruising and pedalling at the same time? Should I go back to a quiet hub motor with no gears or is there an IGH which can handle gear changes electronically better than I can manually and maybe employ a speed drive on the front? I am now trying a BBSHD 1000w which I was told is more bullet-proof than the BBS02B but it is still annoying the hell out of me with derailleur noises of clanging and banging and a slipping chain. I have since found a chainlink with a serious kink which is probably causing a lot of that noise and can be fixed by elimination but what is the solution to my problem?
You are welcome. The sturmy Archer 3 speed can do it. I have heard people use the nexus 7spd. Just don't shift under load with the Shimano. You are welcome on our Discord to chat and get more ideas. You can post video and images there as well.
Awesome video. I understand how important gearing is now, but had to learn the hard way. Wish you had started your site sooner;) Interestingly I burned out my stock controller before wearing out any mechanichal parts. Have since switched out my stock controller for a Ludicrous (was scared to go external then but regret my ignorance) & the 8 speed cassette for a wide ratio 10. I'm also running 42:42 for a granny gear. I like that your controller set up allows for gentle use of the throttle in 1st, mine bucks the bike in lower gears (good thing I usually pedal). The 42:42 may not be "fast" (with most controllers) but will climb anything the wheels can grip, without hurting the motor. May I assume that you're running 72 volts to achieve a reasonable top spead in 1st gear? If I used my BBSHD, at 52 volts, only in 1st gear my top speed wouldn't make "class 1".
It's all a learning process. Made plenty of mistakes myself. I get just over 60kph on the flat. It's quite a big bike with those fat tires so I get 11,000 rpm. The 13,000 was down a hill. The HV demo bike gets more on the flat as it's lighter and running narrower tires.
@@HighVoltageKits It's a fun learn! Helps to have more than one build. Now if I make mistakes I'm not without a bike. I've never fiddled with RPM settings. Not even sure it's an option with the Ludicrous & wouldn't bother on my BBS02 which is detuned for "class 1". Will have to look. As I understood it the RPMs were a direct function of the number of volts (assuming a vacuum). That's why I asked about voltage. Holding off on building my fatty until there are real world reviews of the Photon. Will probaly end up with a BBSHD & your kit tho.
RPMs are governed by Voltage yes. But that changes with Flux or field weakening. This effectively removes the cap. So at 52 volts the bbshd gets maybe 3500 rpm. With field weakening the same motor can reach 9000. Always good to have a backup!
@@HighVoltageKits I really need to study up on field weakening. It was needing to manage it (& wanting my controller internal) that directed me towards the Ludicrous. It's a fine set up but I prefer yours, for my future builds.
My bbshd is still good 4 years later and i still have nylon gear and it has 3000 watt controller. It does not heat up that much it will hit 40 degrees but its winter here
So does this mean the optimal human and motor powerbands are mutually exclusive? You'd be spinning at an incredible cadence running 42t-28t at 60kph. Does this not also mean that gearing for pedal assist at human cadences means lugging the motor to some degree?
Hey! Thanks for the comment. I think you summarized things here in a much more succinct way than I managed to explain in the video. Essentially with all Ebike motors the gearing is not for the motor its for the human being to be able to pedal still. Which is exactly why once the voltage goes up the cadence required to keep up becomes silly. So they gear the motors to allow people to pedal but this does in effect hobble the motor as you say. This leads to heat buildup. Its even worse if people ride in too higher gear as the motor is stuck unable to spin even more. The only real solution is to have two separate drive trains. One for the motor and another one for the human. This is what we will be doing with a project we are all working on with Lightning Rods right now. The other advantage to this separation is you can utilize full variable regen braking! Cheers
@@HighVoltageKits Sounds like some additional reduction gearing would better help match the human and motor gearing. On the CYC X1 I guess getting the largest outboard chainring and swapping in a smaller inner chainring could help a bit. Interested to hear more about this upcoming project - will there be a video about it coming out anytime soon? I'm forever waiting for the next best thing to execute my build. Seems like the tech is still in the emerging phase at the moment. How many years do you reckon we're out from the perfected mid drive + belt + IGH dream?
A 42 to 42 is impossible to peddle the cadences is much to high that why I use hubmotor a can peddle along at 45 km to 50km hour easy with a 50 tooth on the front and a 12 tooth on the back
hey man thanks for all the good info in your videos. im converting a -05 bighit with a bbshd and have 42t front and have ordered a 30t singlespeed for the rear running with a 24" rear wheel. i dont have the money for a bac800 yet so i bought a fsesc 75100 and will add extra cooling. thinking of running 50 battery amps and 80-90 phase amps at 72v and some field weakening but im unsure if my gearing will be an issue do you have any input on this? keep up the good work cheers!
We have a big hit in the works well with a similar gear ratio. I think it will be fine because the rear tire on the big hit is small. The means there will be less force required to spin it. We should be testing ours out pretty soon now the weather here is warming up from winter. This is the latest video on that build ruclips.net/video/wOjBcRzBrug/видео.html
Hello John! I want to ask you something I haven't seen anyone talk about in the diy ebike world. I want to build an ebike with a cyc x1 stealth gen 3 motor and a 52v battery and since I've always wanted to have a wheelie machine, that's exactly what I'm planning on doing quite often with my ebike. I'm planning on using 38t drive train, a 12 gear cassette and wheelie in 1st or 2nd lowest gear and very often use throttle only, even for commuting. My question is, is it possible to do that without burning the throttle (I'm planning on using a motorcycle Domino throttle soldered to a female 3 pin so it can work on the ebike) and without burning/braking the motor ?
The stealth is not really a throttle only motor. You can do it but it will get hot pretty quick as it has the same style of outrunner motor that the Photon has. The X1 is more suited to throttle only riding but it also has its limits over longer distances.
Is that the cyc x1 pro you're talking about being more suited to throttle only ? Also, what about the Bafang BBSHD motor, is it going to be any better than the cyc x1 stealth gen 3 or it's going to have the same overheating issues ?
What would be a good ratio if you are using a Enviolo 380 hub? Now with "human power", I use a 24 up front and a 17 in the rear. Have a 34 also up front to, but it hasn't enough bottom end.
I've been trying to destroy my bbshd since 2019! Wrong gear, full throttle up hills that I can hardly climb on foot and my motor is still killing it! 2800 watts of Boss power. Nylon gear. I do usually run 42 x 30 minimum. Yet when I ride my fixed gear road bike by leg power I run 52 x 16.
Has anyone changed gearing ratios internal to motors. EG, alloy a higher rotor RPM relative to crank RPM. I find my body generally prefers a low pedal cadence. And this then tends to lug the motor more. If you could adjust the internal gear ratio between the motor rotor, and the cranks/output. Then you could spin that motor up higher, for any given pedal cadence.
Its a good idea. I don't know anyone who has done this though. You would have to come up with something pretty custom and have parts machined or find matching parts off the shelf. You could join our discord and have a chat with Lightning Rods. He may be able to give you more suggestions than me because he has made so many drive systems over the years. One way would be to have two separate drive trains. The simplest way would be to use a front hub for a boost and then you can peddle with whatever cadence and gear you wanted pretty much. That might not be the kind of bike you want either though.
@@HighVoltageKits hi you are right,having two drive trains is the way to go remove disk brake and put the drive train on that side and put fix gear on engine side and remove free wheel in the engine so you can use regenerative braking and a lot stronger chain or maybe turn the bbshd around put on left side and make it go backwards to replace disk brake for a gear it even possible to have a disk brake as well using a belt drive so no oil to spin off to the disk brake I will be working on this soon I have a Bbshd would be a interesting project being able to still peddle and have all your gears and the right cadence
2 drivetrains would be good for some applications. But definitely not all. Rowdy trail/enduro eMTB for example would not work well with that kind of setup.
I am getting 60kph on the flat with mine but its set to 3500 watts and not the full HV power. Its bigger wheels but with smaller wheels you would get more rpm as well. I would say its most likely going to be at least 60kph if not faster. The demo bike on a 27.5 frame was getting over 80.
@@HighVoltageKits Wow! My BBSHD & controller, 50 amps & 52 volts, can't reach 60 kph (just shy) using the 42:12 top gear. You've done some sweet magic with that BAC controller.
How can I figure out gear ratio for a trike with jackshaft? I'm running the CYC X1 Pro Gen 2 with stock spoke. Going to jackshaft. From jackshaft to differential axle
If the motor is designed to operate at a speed/rpm that is above the optimum cadence for efficient human muscle operation then it seems to me that quite apart from the fact that the system will be biomechanically inefficient torque and cadence sensors will also not work effectively since you will not be able to spin the cranks fast enough or apply sufficient torque via the cranks. I assume that in such a situation one needs tou use the throttle and peddeling becomes effectively useless. What of the situation where you want the motor to work at maximum eficiency so as not to get hot but you also want to make a contribution via peddeling? In this case would it be better not to overvolt the system and for that matter what rpm are ebike motors designed to work eficiently at? Anything more than about 60rpm at the cranks would seem to be wasteful of muscle power since if I recall correctly muscles work best at about 60 rpm. Surely a motor that can break it's gears is a badly designed one since it's gears should be designed to withstand the maximum torque that the motor is rated to supply. If you try to force the motor to supply more torque than it was designed to supply then would not a fuse safeguard from both broken gears and burned out windings?
Effectively with these bikes, you are building a stealth dirt bike. The fun is in the acceleration you get and ability to climb not so much exercise. The largest voltage I have run is 72 with these and its mainly because the availability of batteries for a reasonable cost dwindles. The controllers we are most familiar with are at that range. But higher still would be more efficient. It might also take me to speeds I'm not that comfortable with. It would not be with an ebike kit. 85 on a CYC was a buzz but only because of how insanely sketchy that is. Most machines are designed in a way that when stressed the part that fails will be an inexpensive one. I don't know enough about muscles to have an opinion on the crank speed. I'm not sure there will ever be the ideal do it all bike. I like the throttle bike for its qualities and currently the cyc Photon for a pedal around bike
It depends really on how hot its getting. Are you getting the performance and speeds you like? The saying is if its not broke don't fix it. I would try and determine the ratios that you are getting from the hub. In general if you go bigger you can get more torque for climbing but lower top speeds. The other option is to reduce the gear ring to a 46 or a 42 and go smaller that way? Lekkie is expensive tho so probably you are right to swap out the rear. Getting something larger than a 24t in a single gear can be tricky as well. Usually those shimano hubs are setup pretty good for gar ratios. There might be a chart online that will give the internal ones in the nexus.
AM Racing AMR 250-90 Single AC Motor - Liquid Cooled, Permanent Magnet - Remy Cartridge [AMR 250-90] Price: $10,900.00 Motor Diameter: 10.5 Inches Motor Case Length: 11.25 Inches Motor Shaft Length End to End: 12.25 Inches Peak Torque: 280 Lb Ft Peak (w/150kW controller) Peak Power: 210 HP Peak (w/150kW controller) Max RPM: 10,000 you crash that you going home in a bucket we just need 1 megawatt batts in aaa size 🚴
Ride your ebike like you would a non ebike - always be in the correct gear. As he said: low motor RPM = inefficient (heat) - it is also is still putting out a load of torque, ready to break anything that's been weakened. The heat soaks into all the components, to the point that it can soften the plastic gear (=failure), demagnetise the magnets in the motor (=failure/permanently reduced power), it can even melt the glue holding the magnets in (normally a CYC thing). It's a bicycle with some electrical assistance, not a f'ing electric moped - ride it as such! Oh, It can go the other way too............... Motor spinning too fast = making its own magnetic field, that gets strong enough to interfere with the working of the motor = loss of power (over simplified) There's a thing called "Field weakening" to deal with this, but not all motors have it.
You did the subtitles it seems much better to me...... And nice to see you in first person with the new backdrop remains only one thing, if you allow me The light that illuminates you from the front is too strong. I think you make your face as white as a sheet of paper. Don't get me wrong, it looks good, but seeing it from your phone, with the effect of the view, seems to blind you dazzled by a ship's lighthouse. Your eyes then, suffer extremely the Cap, it can barely protect you a little. And just a thought that I see through the smartphone, if everything is OK for you pretend not to have read. 👍❤️😉💯
A 1 to 1 gear ratio would mean a 26 inch bike with 2meter tire circumference that goes 30 km/h needs a tire rpm 250x and therefore a cadence of 250 per minute. Who can do a 250 cadence? Answer: No one can! So you got a 1000 Watt Motor that should be good for at least 40 km/h but you are not allowed to use a gear ratio that enables the rider to pedal with the motor in an acceptable and doable cadence. An acceptable pedal cadence at 40 km/h would be 90 rpm so the suitable gear ratio would be 1 to 3,7. In your theory this would damage the motor. If this is true all these mid drive motors are completely trash.
That is a bit of straw man argument there. I think you might be misinterpreting it a bit. The thing is the only reason for gear reductions in mid drive motors is not for the motor. Its for the human being. Once the voltages go up with the modified stuff we do its harder for the cadences to match with the gearing. My BBSHD is heavily modified so it should not be compared to something like a bosch although making sure you use the right gearing with a bosch is still critical or you will bog down and stress the motor. With my BBSHD its running 4000 watts 72 volts. A lot of this video is to show our community which is into modification why to run a gear that is kind. But the idea of making sure you are in the right gear for the situation runs true for any mid drive.
Well i did a total of 17.2 miles on my brand new Bafang 750w correctly using the gears and also fitted with a gear sensor and on the last six miles of my journey and also the flattest part on a smooth road for 6 miles and flat out 32mph the motor started to whining like a dog on heat, i get home check the motor, wtf, you could have cooked a full english breakfast on it, it was that hot, i checked things out and it seems some part of the internal workings are bevelled and under pressure push a gear/cog outwards that starts to rub the inside of the motor housing, on that note and after another two similar episodes i sold the badly engineered piece of shit motor.
Maybe you got a duff motor. It can happen with any product. Sucks you had a bad experience. The one in the video is the 1000watt bbshd. I think you are maybe taking about the 02. It's not as tough but most people don't have your experience.
@@HighVoltageKits yes was the 02 id go with cyc as nicely designed yet horror stories galore of less than 50 miles and burnt out motors, lol thanks for speedy reply high voltage.
The amount of experience and knowledge that is conveyed on this channel is incredibly useful and helpful and it has saved me from making some very costly mistakes (time and money) that I otherwise would have made if I hadn’t watched the related videos on this channel first. If you have a question or a problem related to mid drive motors, chances are it’s been discussed on this channel. It’s really appreciated and thank you, great channel!!
Appreciate the kind words. Thanks. You are welcome on our discord server as well. Cheers
6000+ Road miles on my BBSHD and I finally had to replace the Nylon Pinion drive gear. Not because of heat damage but because of wear. I don't climb any really steep hills with it(it's an Urban warrior/commuter in a relatively flat city) so I spin a lot of RPM to stay around 30-35mph on the busier streets. Replaced it with the PEEK gear just to help extend it's life because of wear... and piece of mind.
Specifics: It started life driving an 8 speed cassette(Shimano HG51-bf group) with a 42t Bafang chain ring. Around 4000 miles on the motor I changed it up. Now it drives a Nexus Inter-5e with 27t Sprocket and a Lekkie 40t HD chain ring(2mm spacer behind it). The switch to the Lekkie was to correct the chain line to the IGH and keep the same 1st gear ratio. Chain line is strait as an arrow now. 1st gear on the Nexus Inter-5e is 1:1, so for those doing the math that puts me at 1.48:1 ratio in 1st gear. Which interestingly enough is nearly the same starting ratio I used in 1st gear on my HG51 cassette/42t setup which was 1.5:1. 5th gear on the IGH however is a HUGE 3.9:1 final ratio. I never use it... unless I'm riding down grade. It's larger than the 8th gear ratio(42:11, that I never used) on my cassette setup. 7th gear was 3.5:1 as it was and could easily hold me at 30mph with power set to 90% on 52v. Yes, I've reprogrammed the power levels in the stock controller.
Thats awesome! Congrats! Your build sounds great.
Just as a side comment this video is mostly useful for those people who are using a controller which allows for field weakening of the motor. Normally motors don't spin up to 13000 rpm so a one to one gear ratio is really only useful if field weakening is used!
I know you mentioned this in the video but it is important and bears repeating!
I set up the high voltage kit on a shimano Alfine geared hub and the first time I rode it I could hardly keep the wheel on the ground. The Alfine in the lowest gear is very low!
Besides the fact I think I broke two spokes in the process I quickly changed it out for a cassette which I locked to the lowest gear as the Alfine would not take that kind of power without destroying itself!
This video is really for single speed setup as far as a drivetrain goes!
Keep up the good work!
Good points and thanks for adding on. The video is mainly for people using the higher power stuff but I wanted to get over the idea that any mid drive will wear much faster in the wrong gear. Appreciate the comment. Yikes on the hub. Must have been quite a shock!
@@HighVoltageKits The spokes hitting up against my frame sounded terrible.
Crucial information for current and future owners. Thanks team! 🥰🥰
Thanks Gizmo!
Words from the wise. 👍
Cheers Monty!
I appreciate your explanation, it's simple enough most I think can understand this. I'll definitely forward your video to others in my community, the human body analogy is a good one.
Thanks for the share, much appreciated.
Great video John. I have a BBS02 with 44 front and 14 34 rear and a BBSHD with 42 front and 11 42 rear. no problems at all with overheating or the nylon gear but I do as you advise use the gears correctly and keep it spinning uphills. Both running 48 V so not overstressing at all. Still important to be in the correct gear mind you.
Cheers John sounds like in your case I am trying to teach Grandma how to suck eggs if you know that expression? Thanks for the comment.
What brakes do you have John?
Hi John, I'm glad you mentioned that you still have your nylon gear. I was quite concerned about this on my recumbent trike as I have the HV upgrade kit without the peek gear. I will take my BBSHD motor apart and regrease it before putting the trike back on the road. Great video, by the way.
Thanks you are most welcome. Watch the RPMs and watts and see what you are getting. You might want to go a bit more safe than 1:1. I doubt you need to worry about wheelies so you could use a 32t up front. I expect chain line is not an issue either. Love to see some photos of this build on Discord.
You should definitely be aware of gear changes on a recumbent...the extra weight is going to need exact hear changes
@Rick Sanchez , I don't have any gears to change as this is a single rear 42 tooth gear. 1 to 1 ratio, but Captain Codswallop is suggesting a smaller front gear.
Good video, John.
You have a good radio voice, and you explain things clearly.
Problem with Bafang mid drives is getting a small enough chain wheel on the front and having a decent chainline.
I have a 42 tooth lekkie knockoff on the front, anything smaller gives a horrendous chain line. It would be nice to have a 32 or smaller on the front for trail riding. Not really interested in speed, it s a bicycle not a motorcycle.
Thanks for the kind words. You hit the nail there. I wish there were more economical and strong igh options.
Excellent. This video is timely I am about to rebuild up my Surley Krampus with my BBSHD. Thank-you.
You are most welcome. If you want any help you are most welcome on our Discord community. Great frame btw
@@HighVoltageKits thank-you. I will. Yes, Surley makes good bikes. Got it for a steal. (took it to police to check if it was stolen. It was not.) 😇
Congrats! That's incredible
@@HighVoltageKits $100.00 for a full bike. Perfect for build up, and new paint.
So jealous. Bargain of the century
I run a bling ring 42 up front 9 speed on back or my 29er 11 smallest 800 miles on my BBSHD 52 never had a problem so far been great
Sounds like you are having a blast.
My bbshd is also more than 5 years old and still ok, 2 times I opened it to clean and grease. Mileage is about 9000-10000 km per year, full throttle all the time, 52v battery.
Bomb proof! Cheers
Thanks!
You are most welcome. Thanks for the tip. Truly appreciated!
It is better to replace a nylon gear than replace a motor, good old nylon fuse :)
Yes and I am sure that is why Bafang chose it. Lots of motor companies use them for the same reason. People see it as a weak point but its not. Its to fail first. Great comment! Cheers
I've finally got my build together enough to test it and see how it runs but for now I'm stuck with a 46 tooth crank gear that came with the motor. Any other gear that sits any closer or is a smaller diameter will hit the frame. The bike Ive installed it on has a 7 speed shimano with the largest gear being a 28 T. Something has to be changed. I took it for a quick spin and hit 45 mph and put it away. It was plenty warm
Wise man, thank might be a bit aggressive. Feel free to post on discord if you want help with chain line etc
@@HighVoltageKits I think I'm going to consider an entire new rear end. Would you know if any of the IGHs would be on the lower side. Obviously I don't need higher gears if it's going to burn me up. Or am I faced with findinding a way to space a smaller gear on my crank out away from the frame? Those are my starting points.
I would post this on discord with photos. I am not too sure of the various igh ratios. You would definitely benefit from posting pics and video clips here.
Great video John!👍
Thank you Sir!
Good video, thanks for the info.. I’m waiting to get my cyc x1 gen4 and I’m trying to get as much knowledge about it as possible before installing it. I don’t want to be the reason something happens lol
You are welcome. You can join our discord community if you wanted to post build photos. I am sure folk will help out if needed. Cheers
Thank you, I will definitely be joining the discord community, Im just finishing up my 72v x1 pro gen4 build on my Specialized fuse 6fattie and I can’t tell you how much help this channel has been. It’s saved me a great deal of headaches I can assure you lol and theres still a lot of up grades and mods I want to do in the future. My close friends and family say I’m obsessed with riding and building e-bikes but I prefer to call it passionate 😂
Also in your opinion, does the x1 pro gen4 rotor magnets now being mechanically secured instead of being glued on, as well as the over all increase in length potentially solve a lot of the issues that have been seen in previous gen’s? Like rotor/magnet failure at higher rpm’s and motor temp because of increased heat dissipation with the increase in length?
I have a 46 tooth in the front and 16 tooth on the back with my 8 speed i.g.h i keep it in 4 gear or 5 gear and its good i have had my bbshd 3 years and i have a 3300 watt controller on it.
That's good to know its holding up. I presume you are not doing any shifting under load?
thats amazing still works. I run a 46T and it didnt last15 minutes with a 2800Watt controller. First ride out, going 70km/h, bye bye
10t
That 10 will do for the nylon lol. 53t is huge. What cassette is it?
I finally built my KTM fatbike and went for my first ride, blew the nylon gear after 10 minutes. 2800 Watts, full throttle, 80km/h BBSHD 46T up front and 14 in the back...LOL, I didn't know about this video, now I do.....
It happens mate. Luckily gears are cheap. 46 42 maybe. You are welcome on our Discord for more help. Love to see bike photos as well! Cheers
Nice video John..if only some one could Bolt à 3 speed gearbox on the BBSHD and have a gates belt life would be perfect..ps next time talk about stress on the drive chain...anyway keep up the good work many newbies will learn from our mistakes. 👌👌👍👍
A three speed BBSHD like that would be great! Good point on the drive train. Its easy to snap chains on the BBSHD in the wrong gear! Cheers
Yes… I’ve been wanting a midrive transmission for a while now… I saw a Pinion a while back… but not enough power for me.
They now have a 12 speed
@@HighVoltageKitsinvent a combo sprocket for the motor I'm damn sure it can be done 12 24 38 on the motor just need people looking that way
I only use smaller cogs on the flat or going downhill, while pedaling as fast as I can. I use it as I would a standard shift automobile.
Yeah its no different really. Cheers Joe
Original nylon gear on mine and not a single issue. Just remember to gear for torque as much as possible, especially if you are on less than a 72v setup.
Same here. If you treat it right they last. I just opened mine up and it looks good so far.
Thanks for that explanation. I ride a recumbent trike on a regular basis. I started with a Bionx Hub Motor which lasted me about 6 years of trouble-free riding. Then I fitted a Bafang BBS02B Mid Drive motor which blew my mind with its power and acceleration. But it only lasted for about 4000 km and kept getting very hot. Now the acceleration was such that I tended to change up gears by 2 or 3 at a time to keep up and after a few minutes, I was in top gear and doing about 35kph. I was still pedalling only because I used a 65T chainring which allowed me to pedal up to say 50kph. As my small (top gear) was about 11t, you are going to tell me that I blew up the motor because of my large chainring! Well, what is the answer if I want high-speed cruising and pedalling at the same time? Should I go back to a quiet hub motor with no gears or is there an IGH which can handle gear changes electronically better than I can manually and maybe employ a speed drive on the front? I am now trying a BBSHD 1000w which I was told is more bullet-proof than the BBS02B but it is still annoying the hell out of me with derailleur noises of clanging and banging and a slipping chain. I have since found a chainlink with a serious kink which is probably causing a lot of that noise and can be fixed by elimination but what is the solution to my problem?
You are welcome. The sturmy Archer 3 speed can do it. I have heard people use the nexus 7spd. Just don't shift under load with the Shimano. You are welcome on our Discord to chat and get more ideas. You can post video and images there as well.
Get the new cyc x1 pro gen 4 72v 5000w . And put a sram drive train on it. And buy a ebike chain.
Need help with my Trike Project gearing.
Awesome video. I understand how important gearing is now, but had to learn the hard way. Wish you had started your site sooner;) Interestingly I burned out my stock controller before wearing out any mechanichal parts. Have since switched out my stock controller for a Ludicrous (was scared to go external then but regret my ignorance) & the 8 speed cassette for a wide ratio 10. I'm also running 42:42 for a granny gear. I like that your controller set up allows for gentle use of the throttle in 1st, mine bucks the bike in lower gears (good thing I usually pedal). The 42:42 may not be "fast" (with most controllers) but will climb anything the wheels can grip, without hurting the motor.
May I assume that you're running 72 volts to achieve a reasonable top spead in 1st gear? If I used my BBSHD, at 52 volts, only in 1st gear my top speed wouldn't make "class 1".
It's all a learning process. Made plenty of mistakes myself. I get just over 60kph on the flat. It's quite a big bike with those fat tires so I get 11,000 rpm. The 13,000 was down a hill. The HV demo bike gets more on the flat as it's lighter and running narrower tires.
@@HighVoltageKits It's a fun learn! Helps to have more than one build. Now if I make mistakes I'm not without a bike.
I've never fiddled with RPM settings. Not even sure it's an option with the Ludicrous & wouldn't bother on my BBS02 which is detuned for "class 1". Will have to look. As I understood it the RPMs were a direct function of the number of volts (assuming a vacuum). That's why I asked about voltage.
Holding off on building my fatty until there are real world reviews of the Photon. Will probaly end up with a BBSHD & your kit tho.
RPMs are governed by Voltage yes. But that changes with Flux or field weakening. This effectively removes the cap. So at 52 volts the bbshd gets maybe 3500 rpm. With field weakening the same motor can reach 9000. Always good to have a backup!
@@HighVoltageKits I really need to study up on field weakening. It was needing to manage it (& wanting my controller internal) that directed me towards the Ludicrous. It's a fine set up but I prefer yours, for my future builds.
I will do an in-depth guide at some point on FW if that is something people would like. It's complex lol.
My bbshd is still good 4 years later and i still have nylon gear and it has 3000 watt controller. It does not heat up that much it will hit 40 degrees but its winter here
Same here. I will be taking mine apart soon so we can all have a look.
So does this mean the optimal human and motor powerbands are mutually exclusive? You'd be spinning at an incredible cadence running 42t-28t at 60kph. Does this not also mean that gearing for pedal assist at human cadences means lugging the motor to some degree?
Hey! Thanks for the comment. I think you summarized things here in a much more succinct way than I managed to explain in the video. Essentially with all Ebike motors the gearing is not for the motor its for the human being to be able to pedal still. Which is exactly why once the voltage goes up the cadence required to keep up becomes silly. So they gear the motors to allow people to pedal but this does in effect hobble the motor as you say. This leads to heat buildup. Its even worse if people ride in too higher gear as the motor is stuck unable to spin even more. The only real solution is to have two separate drive trains. One for the motor and another one for the human. This is what we will be doing with a project we are all working on with Lightning Rods right now. The other advantage to this separation is you can utilize full variable regen braking! Cheers
@@HighVoltageKits Sounds like some additional reduction gearing would better help match the human and motor gearing. On the CYC X1 I guess getting the largest outboard chainring and swapping in a smaller inner chainring could help a bit. Interested to hear more about this upcoming project - will there be a video about it coming out anytime soon? I'm forever waiting for the next best thing to execute my build. Seems like the tech is still in the emerging phase at the moment. How many years do you reckon we're out from the perfected mid drive + belt + IGH dream?
A 42 to 42 is impossible to peddle the cadences is much to high that why I use hubmotor a can peddle along at 45 km to 50km hour easy with a 50 tooth on the front and a 12 tooth on the back
Yeah advantage hub for that scenario for sure.
hey man thanks for all the good info in your videos. im converting a -05 bighit with a bbshd and have 42t front and have ordered a 30t singlespeed for the rear running with a 24" rear wheel. i dont have the money for a bac800 yet so i bought a fsesc 75100 and will add extra cooling. thinking of running 50 battery amps and 80-90 phase amps at 72v and some field weakening but im unsure if my gearing will be an issue do you have any input on this?
keep up the good work
cheers!
We have a big hit in the works well with a similar gear ratio. I think it will be fine because the rear tire on the big hit is small. The means there will be less force required to spin it. We should be testing ours out pretty soon now the weather here is warming up from winter. This is the latest video on that build ruclips.net/video/wOjBcRzBrug/видео.html
Hello John! I want to ask you something I haven't seen anyone talk about in the diy ebike world. I want to build an ebike with a cyc x1 stealth gen 3 motor and a 52v battery and since I've always wanted to have a wheelie machine, that's exactly what I'm planning on doing quite often with my ebike. I'm planning on using 38t drive train, a 12 gear cassette and wheelie in 1st or 2nd lowest gear and very often use throttle only, even for commuting. My question is, is it possible to do that without burning the throttle (I'm planning on using a motorcycle Domino throttle soldered to a female 3 pin so it can work on the ebike) and without burning/braking the motor ?
The stealth is not really a throttle only motor. You can do it but it will get hot pretty quick as it has the same style of outrunner motor that the Photon has. The X1 is more suited to throttle only riding but it also has its limits over longer distances.
Is that the cyc x1 pro you're talking about being more suited to throttle only ? Also, what about the Bafang BBSHD motor, is it going to be any better than the cyc x1 stealth gen 3 or it's going to have the same overheating issues ?
What would be a good ratio if you are using a Enviolo 380 hub? Now with "human power", I use a 24 up front and a 17 in the rear. Have a 34 also up front to, but it hasn't enough bottom end.
Which motor are you using here?
@@HighVoltageKits Will be a CYC Photon. Seems they are coming to the US and are looking at UL certification. Lets all say Halaluya.
I've been trying to destroy my bbshd since 2019! Wrong gear, full throttle up hills that I can hardly climb on foot and my motor is still killing it! 2800 watts of Boss power. Nylon gear. I do usually run 42 x 30 minimum. Yet when I ride my fixed gear road bike by leg power I run 52 x 16.
They are rock solid. The Nylon gear seems to attract hate from people that in reality is not deserved.
Has anyone changed gearing ratios internal to motors. EG, alloy a higher rotor RPM relative to crank RPM.
I find my body generally prefers a low pedal cadence. And this then tends to lug the motor more. If you could adjust the internal gear ratio between the motor rotor, and the cranks/output. Then you could spin that motor up higher, for any given pedal cadence.
Its a good idea. I don't know anyone who has done this though. You would have to come up with something pretty custom and have parts machined or find matching parts off the shelf. You could join our discord and have a chat with Lightning Rods. He may be able to give you more suggestions than me because he has made so many drive systems over the years. One way would be to have two separate drive trains. The simplest way would be to use a front hub for a boost and then you can peddle with whatever cadence and gear you wanted pretty much. That might not be the kind of bike you want either though.
@@HighVoltageKits hi you are right,having two drive trains is the way to go remove disk brake and put the drive train on that side and put fix gear on engine side and remove free wheel in the engine so you can use regenerative braking and a lot stronger chain or maybe turn the bbshd around put on left side and make it go backwards to replace disk brake for a gear it even possible to have a disk brake as well using a belt drive so no oil to spin off to the disk brake I will be working on this soon I have a Bbshd would be a interesting project being able to still peddle and have all your gears and the right cadence
Awesome. Love to see some photos when you are done. Sounds like a great project.
2 drivetrains would be good for some applications. But definitely not all. Rowdy trail/enduro eMTB for example would not work well with that kind of setup.
Yes, but what is the max speed using 1:1? Using 26" wheels? Edit; with a BBSHD
I am getting 60kph on the flat with mine but its set to 3500 watts and not the full HV power. Its bigger wheels but with smaller wheels you would get more rpm as well. I would say its most likely going to be at least 60kph if not faster. The demo bike on a 27.5 frame was getting over 80.
@@HighVoltageKits Yes but what did you set the max rpm to for the HD?
Quite a lot speedier than if you just cooked your motor because you made it labour by using a bigger ratio to try to go even faster! 🙂
@@HighVoltageKits 12000 rpm?
@@HighVoltageKits Wow! My BBSHD & controller, 50 amps & 52 volts, can't reach 60 kph (just shy) using the 42:12 top gear. You've done some sweet magic with that BAC controller.
How can I figure out gear ratio for a trike with jackshaft? I'm running the CYC X1 Pro Gen 2 with stock spoke. Going to jackshaft. From jackshaft to differential axle
Good to chat Randy!
@@HighVoltageKits right on.
Always check you Watts on climbing when it's too high it's time to gear down
Thats a good trick actually. If the watts fall off then the motor rpm has to be spinning faster which is more optimal.
If the motor is designed to operate at a speed/rpm that is above the optimum cadence for efficient human muscle operation then it seems to me that quite apart from the fact that the system will be biomechanically inefficient torque and cadence sensors will also not work effectively since you will not be able to spin the cranks fast enough or apply sufficient torque via the cranks.
I assume that in such a situation one needs tou use the throttle and peddeling becomes effectively useless.
What of the situation where you want the motor to work at maximum eficiency so as not to get hot but you also want to make a contribution via peddeling?
In this case would it be better not to overvolt the system and for that matter what rpm are ebike motors designed to work eficiently at? Anything more than about 60rpm at the cranks would seem to be wasteful of muscle power since if I recall correctly muscles work best at about 60 rpm.
Surely a motor that can break it's gears is a badly designed one since it's gears should be designed to withstand the maximum torque that the motor is rated to supply.
If you try to force the motor to supply more torque than it was designed to supply then would not a fuse safeguard from both broken gears and burned out windings?
Effectively with these bikes, you are building a stealth dirt bike. The fun is in the acceleration you get and ability to climb not so much exercise. The largest voltage I have run is 72 with these and its mainly because the availability of batteries for a reasonable cost dwindles. The controllers we are most familiar with are at that range. But higher still would be more efficient. It might also take me to speeds I'm not that comfortable with. It would not be with an ebike kit. 85 on a CYC was a buzz but only because of how insanely sketchy that is. Most machines are designed in a way that when stressed the part that fails will be an inexpensive one. I don't know enough about muscles to have an opinion on the crank speed. I'm not sure there will ever be the ideal do it all bike. I like the throttle bike for its qualities and currently the cyc Photon for a pedal around bike
@@HighVoltageKits Thanks for the reply.
hello, I'm running a bbshd stock with a lekkie 52t and 21t at the back with a shimano nexus 8, sould I replace the rear cog? which size?
It depends really on how hot its getting. Are you getting the performance and speeds you like? The saying is if its not broke don't fix it. I would try and determine the ratios that you are getting from the hub. In general if you go bigger you can get more torque for climbing but lower top speeds. The other option is to reduce the gear ring to a 46 or a 42 and go smaller that way? Lekkie is expensive tho so probably you are right to swap out the rear. Getting something larger than a 24t in a single gear can be tricky as well. Usually those shimano hubs are setup pretty good for gar ratios. There might be a chart online that will give the internal ones in the nexus.
@@HighVoltageKits ok thanks
You are welcome on our Discord group if you want to post pics etc. I'm sure people will be interested in an igh setup.
If I only want 3 gearsin the back, what other 2 should I use besides a 1:1 42? an HD and bac800 setup?
Maybe a 38 and a 36 for that bike. I think thats what you normally get in those clusters.
@@HighVoltageKits 3 granny gears in the back? nah, I need more top speed.
@@HighVoltageKits my mistake, I forgot to say with a 52v not a 72.
AM Racing AMR 250-90 Single AC Motor - Liquid Cooled, Permanent Magnet - Remy Cartridge
[AMR 250-90]
Price: $10,900.00
Motor Diameter: 10.5 Inches
Motor Case Length: 11.25 Inches
Motor Shaft Length End to End: 12.25 Inches
Peak Torque: 280 Lb Ft Peak (w/150kW controller)
Peak Power: 210 HP Peak (w/150kW controller)
Max RPM: 10,000
you crash that you going home in a bucket we just need 1 megawatt batts in aaa size 🚴
You got a web link?
Ride your ebike like you would a non ebike - always be in the correct gear.
As he said: low motor RPM = inefficient (heat) - it is also is still putting out a load of torque, ready to break anything that's been weakened.
The heat soaks into all the components, to the point that it can soften the plastic gear (=failure), demagnetise the magnets in the motor (=failure/permanently reduced power), it can even melt the glue holding the magnets in (normally a CYC thing).
It's a bicycle with some electrical assistance, not a f'ing electric moped - ride it as such!
Oh,
It can go the other way too...............
Motor spinning too fast = making its own magnetic field, that gets strong enough to interfere with the working of the motor = loss of power (over simplified)
There's a thing called "Field weakening" to deal with this, but not all motors have it.
Well said. You can turn a bike into a mini dirtbike but at this point you mostly loose the ability to keep up with the peddles anyway. Cheers
You did the subtitles it seems much better to me...... And nice to see you in first person with the new backdrop remains only one thing, if you allow me The light that illuminates you from the front is too strong. I think you make your face as white as a sheet of paper.
Don't get me wrong, it looks good, but seeing it from your phone, with the effect of the view, seems to blind you dazzled by a ship's lighthouse.
Your eyes then, suffer extremely the Cap, it can barely protect you a little.
And just a thought that I see through the smartphone, if everything is OK for you pretend not to have read. 👍❤️😉💯
I am a pasty white Englishman lol. You are quite correct though. I need to sort the light out up front to something better. I am on the lookout!
@@HighVoltageKits 😆👍
I liked the way you broke this down, but I find it crazy that this isn't common sense in this day and age
Not gonna argue with you here.
A 1 to 1 gear ratio would mean a 26 inch bike with 2meter tire circumference that goes 30 km/h needs a tire rpm 250x and therefore a cadence of 250 per minute. Who can do a 250 cadence? Answer: No one can! So you got a 1000 Watt Motor that should be good for at least 40 km/h but you are not allowed to use a gear ratio that enables the rider to pedal with the motor in an acceptable and doable cadence. An acceptable pedal cadence at 40 km/h would be 90 rpm so the suitable gear ratio would be 1 to 3,7. In your theory this would damage the motor. If this is true all these mid drive motors are completely trash.
That is a bit of straw man argument there. I think you might be misinterpreting it a bit. The thing is the only reason for gear reductions in mid drive motors is not for the motor. Its for the human being. Once the voltages go up with the modified stuff we do its harder for the cadences to match with the gearing. My BBSHD is heavily modified so it should not be compared to something like a bosch although making sure you use the right gearing with a bosch is still critical or you will bog down and stress the motor. With my BBSHD its running 4000 watts 72 volts. A lot of this video is to show our community which is into modification why to run a gear that is kind. But the idea of making sure you are in the right gear for the situation runs true for any mid drive.
@@HighVoltageKits But I hope you can agree that the cadence of the motor has to match the desired pedal cadence of the rider.
Abruptly ended there
Yeah I think I made a slight boo boo.
Well i did a total of 17.2 miles on my brand new Bafang 750w correctly using the gears and also fitted with a gear sensor and on the last six miles of my journey and also the flattest part on a smooth road for 6 miles and flat out 32mph the motor started to whining like a dog on heat, i get home check the motor, wtf, you could have cooked a full english breakfast on it, it was that hot, i checked things out and it seems some part of the internal workings are bevelled and under pressure push a gear/cog outwards that starts to rub the inside of the motor housing, on that note and after another two similar episodes i sold the badly engineered piece of shit motor.
Maybe you got a duff motor. It can happen with any product. Sucks you had a bad experience. The one in the video is the 1000watt bbshd. I think you are maybe taking about the 02. It's not as tough but most people don't have your experience.
@@HighVoltageKits yes was the 02 id go with cyc as nicely designed yet horror stories galore of less than 50 miles and burnt out motors, lol thanks for speedy reply high voltage.