@Barkme Wolf Adding a "divide by two" circuit would take the input from the speed sensor and basically divide it by half so the output is half of what the sensor should receive. If you have any EE friends, they could possibly make you one. I think the speed sensor for the Radrover is based off of what RPM the rear wheel (read: hub motor) is doing. So intercepting and modulating that signal could be one way to potentially gain more top speed. The challenge would be in diagnosing and accessing how the system as a whole does that. My 60 lb. Radrover would do around 22 mph with a 180 lb. rider (me!). Now from all my research, the stock Bafang 750W geared hub motor is only good for around 20 mph and kind of putters out past that point. That is due to how the motor is internally wound. You cannot change that. Less windings and thicker wire grant you more top-speed while more windings and thiner wire grant you more torque. The RM G06.750.DC Bafang motor is somewhere in the middle of those two extremes. If you had the capability to add increasing amounts of amperage, the motor would eventually reach the maximum RPM that it could attain. You are limited by the design of the motor essentially. Changing the tire diameter in the display settings could potentially alter the top speed by "tricking" the controller to apply more power at a higher speed instead of cutting it off once it reaches 24.85 mph (or 40 kph as is the limit in the speed settings). The way to check this would be with GPS to determine your true speed. Try it at 24", 26", and 28" wheel settings and see what kind of results you get. As far as the BBSHD goes, I went that route personally becasuse I was limited by the rear motor and factory controller. I didn't see a way around this so I opted to remove the rear motor (lighter weight and less drag), install a larger 52V battery (which helped me back when it was stock to gain a couple of mph), 11-32 freewheel cassette (better gearing and less drag), and install the BBSHD mid-drive conversion kit (30+ mph with 42T front sprocket or 40+ mph with 46T sprocket). They do make a 30T and a 52T for the BBSHD, but I feel like the 42T is where the best combo of gearing is (especially with my new cassette in the back).
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