OK here it is!
I've had some smiles and some frowns building this baby. Basics: Marin Palisades 2012 hardtail 29er with BBSHD and 52V Luna Shark pack 13.5 amphr battery.
Smiles first: big smile during my commute to work on Friday.
Here's the Strava segment. 13.3 miles, 1200 feet of climbing, 45 minutes (usually an hour, but this ride included looking for lost keys, see frowns).
The big climb from Sausalito to the Golden Gate Bridge took me only 3 minutes. Usually takes me 9 minutes (going fast on a road bike). I use pedal assist level 5 the whole way. On the bridge and bike paths I run the speed limit (or close to it). So not much difference there.
Huge smile. I met my goal of putting on work clothes in the morning and biking to work without sweating. Of course, I hit the heavy fog on the golden gate bridge and arrived soaking wet anyway...oh well...
My adventure with soldering the battery and motor together went smoothly. I twisted the wires together, lathered with solder, and covered with heat shrink, then electrical tape. My next adventure will be soldering the front and rear lights to this same connection. I've been following this thread on the electric bike forum:
http://electricbike.com/forum/forum/main-forum/diy-discussion/876-lights. I'm still waiting for clarity on the optimal place to wire the lights. I called luna support and one of the guys said to wire it to the wires going to the controller. But i'm scared to mess with the controller (C965). Maybe I shouldn't be scared. It would be a lot shorter wire.
The battery kept rotating up and trapping my rear derailer cable against the down tube. So I stuck a rubber shim in place to keep it from rotating.
Frowns:
1. Luna cycle guy advised me to buy this tool to install the first part that holds the motor in place (
http://amzn.com/B002PTVDP0). It doesn't fit. You can only turn it part way, then it can't reach around for the next turn. I ended up using a plumbing wrench to turn it part way, then this tool, the plumbing wrench, etc. Not sure if it's tightened enough, frankly, though got it pretty tight in the end.
2. hydraulic ebrake sensors don't fit my hydraulic breaks. Just no place to put the sensor and magnet that makes sense. I just purchased the full brakes from Luna.
http://lunacycle.com/parts/bicycle-parts/brakes/shimano-m355-hydraulic-brakes/
3. I lost keys to my battery at the bike shop (while buying a new chain - old one was too short). Spent some time riding around looking for them, no dice, asked Luna if they'd send some new keys with the brakes.
4. My 52V shark battery pack doesn't fit into my water bottle cage holder. There isn't enough room to use the bottom water bottle mount (hits the seat tube). So I mounted it just on the top one. Might have to ask the shop guys to drill another hole. I don't want to drill myself and crack the frame.
5. I thought I would have enough charge to make it to work and back. Wrong. My battery died on the golden gate bridge on the way home. Biking home a 50lb bike in a rush to get the kids...big workout! Here's the Strava segment:
https://www.strava.com/activities/503101858
Guess I need to bring my charger to work with me.
Adventure continues! It's all part of the fun of building your own bike. I'm learning a ton. Total cost is approaching $2K with all the upgrades (rack, fenders, new helmet with face shield, new tires on the way, brakes, lights, etc.). That doesn't include the cost of the bike itself. So I can understand why some people opt for a factory made ebike. I still believe this is more powerful than what's out there currently. I might be running my battery too hard and perhaps should have purchased the 11.5 ah pack instead of the 13.5. And I'm just getting started in learning how to ride it. Shifting is loud - clunk! I don't have any shift sensor or ebrakes, so I just try not to shift too much under load. Hard though, as a biker I'm so used to shifting all the damn time.
OK, enough, will update in the future. Thanks again for everyone's advice on this journey!