indianajo
Well-Known Member
I ride a hub motor bike, on the front. A mac12. Very torquey, can start me & 80 lb groceries in the middle of a 15% grade. 330 lb gross. It doesn't sound as if your terrain would overheat a mac12. They can't run slowly up grade at full throttle for more than ~20 minutes. I ride mine on 77 hills over 27 miles, and it is fine if my knee is acting up that day.Thank you for all the replies! Based on what you guys are saying, should I just eliminate the hub motor bikes I was looking at or is there a possibility I could get up hills with them?
OTOH, what I like about geared hub motor is I can pedal it myself without drag 80% of the time. Then when the wind picks up to 25 mph in my face, and my ride home would take 6 hours, I use the motor. You with your knee problem, the drag of a mid drive unpowered would not be an issue. Main down side there is frequent chain replacement and sometimes parts of the motor. My chains last 5000 miles and when I wore out a hub motor @ 4500 miles, I had a new one on in 2 afternoons. Would have been one afternoon if I hadn't of had to make a new mount for the controller because the wires on the new one were too short. Other down side to mid drive, all the pedaling has my heart "has nothing wrong with it" at age 70. You don't get that aerobic exercise with a mid drive. Keep up a YMCA membership and use the pool for lap swimming 4 times a week for heart maintenance.
That controller that quotes 17 ah, big lie. Controllers don't store much energy, and that is what AH is. AH is the rating of batteries. Controllers will put out a certain number of amps, which is current, not energy. My first controller would put out 30 amp. This controller with the MAC is less amps, but I can't measure it without installing a shunt, which is too much trouble.
Last edited: