If the two are the same voltage, depends if the hall effect pickups are similar and have the same connector. No telling if that is true. The controller box, display throttle and brakes are all sort of married to each other. Hub motors are more generic. Motor to controller box power connectors may need changing, how handy are you? I'm pretty good with crimp on bullet connectors using a klein tool, no trouble with screw down connections that mate with crimp on fork terminals, and managed to get the second XT90 to solder on the wire without melting it. Andersen takes a special tool. Your results may vary.
Interesting frame design on the Seagull. And at $1,369 a decent price point for an entry level eBike. Has Tektro hydraulic disc brakes, suspension fork, throttle and 26mph pedal assist. I also like the rear brake light built into the battery.
Does it have a Torque or Cadence sensor?
https://bestebikestore.com/products/affordable-seagull-electric-mountain-bike
$749 shipped on amazon right now, erider-61. But this one is 36V and 500W.
https://www.amazon.com/ECOTRIC-Alum...ecotric+ebike&qid=1552616524&s=gateway&sr=8-3
Most hub motors have standardized the wire colors. There will be usually be 8 wires. Three heavier wires, yellow, blue, green, and five thinner ones, red, black, yellow, blue, green. Just a matter of matching the colors.
I'm looking at an Ecotric right now. It has a tiny 5 pin plug for the small wires, and the three heavy wires look either crimped or soldered. It's all packed tightly in a compartment by the pedals. Yeah, it's doable.
Haha. The description for the 50W model says it's a "brushless toothless motor". I bet they meant to say "gearless". In this case, a gearless (direct drive) motor in the 500W size is likely to feel toothless.
Is you bike 48V, mister mjorg, or is it 36V? What model of Bafang did you have in mind?. I think all their motors are toothed.
I don't think you will get much more than 24 mph with the existing controller/battery and a different motor. A bafang geared motor will not run much faster than that.
One of these cheapo 1000-1500W direct drive hub motors might take you closer to 30 mph. It will have a controller., but your frame battery might be a little small. You will want something that can supply 30A.
I have a 1000 watt Ectotix Seagull E-bike that I may want to change the motor out to a Bafang. Can I just replace the motor? Or do I have to change out all the electronics?
In any electric vehicle, the power and longevity are more than just changing a motor. It only uses what energy is sent to it through the controller and the programmed rate. A controller will burn up far easier than a motor. A programmable controller is what you need before a new motor.So I'm wondering if I could easily replace the motor and get more power and longevity.
More watts doesn't necesarily mean more torque. They are measuring what goes into the motor, not what power comes out. My 1000 W DD motor got me up a steep long grade in February at 240 lb gross, but won't drive me over 20 mph. My 1000 W geared hub motor has started in the middle of a 15% grade at 330 lb gross. I haven't been on good enough pavement on that bike to find out how fast it will go.
Geared & gearless motors use the same wiring. The deal is, some use a little round 6 pin sealed connector, some use a rectangular .4"x.8" connector with flat pins that push out if you flatten the tang. You don't get to see what the hall effect connector looks like when you buy a motor, and splicing the wires strikes me as a road failure hazard. You can't buy the connectors except on alibaba in packs of 100 or 1000, and the listings have no dimensions, just a picture, so what are you buying? The vendors are not pro like AMP or Molex, no drawings available in English. Pro vendors like digikey, mouser, farnell won't touch these connectors. Low voltage low current signals are harder to get to stay moving in the salt and the rain.
Mouser promised me XT90's for the motor wires on my Luna battery, but after 110 days couldn't come up with a projected ship date, so I cancelled that order & tried e-bay. Gold plate on 30 amp connectors is stupid, but that is what you get from an XT90.
The motor drive wires, battery to controller wires, once you learn to make a crimp terminals are all the same. Trick to crimping is use a klein or ideal crimp tool, squeeze hard, and make sure the wire won't pull out after you crimp it. Oh, use dorman, ideal, 3m, T&B, panduit terminals. ****ese bullet or .250 flag terminals melt out at 30 amps.
My still_in_the_box Ecotric 20" fatbike has a motor cable connector. It looks like this. I've also attached a photo of one that is opened.
They fit together quite snugly to keep moisture out. One "gotcha" is that many users don't fully seat them and get connectivity failures.
Indianjo is quite right. If you have to splice the 8 or 9 wire cable, you've created a failure point. The three thicker wires that carry power are not easy to solder and dress in a manner that won't eventually break from vibration. The five small wires are much easier, so easy that the first time I spliced one of these cables one of the little wires broke because I had nicked it too hard with my wire strippers.
Anyway, if you've got the connector, it's a standard. Find a motor that uses it.