Belts are totally possible on either or both sides, absolutely. Chains keep development simpler and are the best place to start (ideal for off-road too).I think a cooler configuration would be to have dual belts with an IGH for the rider transmission but that would have pushed the development costs I'm guessing.
Belts are totally possible on either or both sides, absolutely. Chains keep development simpler and are the best place to start (ideal for off-road too).
Full-suspension we also skipped over to keep things simple, and while Regen has been tested, we're holding back on that too due to unnecessary complexities... Simplicity is key.
You did some really smart things with this design. If you can have adapter brackets to mount in place of Bosch, Yamaha, Brose, and Bafang mids that will keep you from trying to get the OEMs to create a different frame just for your motor which is a big entry barrier for any new mid-drive (I think this is what killed Kervelo's, Sach's, Continental's, mid-drive efforts and is impacting Revonte's as well). I think that is one of your goals. You should investigate progressive regen to eliminate the need for a rear brake to simplify the bike more (just oversize the front).Belts are totally possible on either or both sides, absolutely. Chains keep development simpler and are the best place to start (ideal for off-road too).
Full-suspension we also skipped over to keep things simple, and while Regen has been tested, we're holding back on that too due to unnecessary complexities... Simplicity is key.
I really get confused as to why so many claim that you can't use a throttle and still get a "bike-like" ride experience. I have an ebike that has both throttle and PAS and I found that riding it in throttle mode was the only way I could get the assist level I wanted in every riding situation and once I got use to idea of riding as a bike my control of the throttle became 2nd nature. This is just my opinion but I just don't think any amount of sensors and programming will enable a PAS to provide the assist that is best for all riding situations (I think it's more about programmer's ego thinking they can do this better than the rider with a throttle....good luck with that dream).As Ravi Kempaiah previously pointed out, the key to the rideability of this dual channel power delivery design is matching the torque sensing PAS tuning on the human pedaled right side to the left’s fixed gear’d power delivery. I assume much of your two year development time was devoted to shakedown/tuning of the controller and its programming. So some obvious questions are: is the controller a proprietary board integrated internally to the motor a la the Bafang Ultra or an external box like an ASI BAC 855? Either way, are the ride characteristics going to be accessible/tunable by the user? For example, I assume your initial offering fat hardtail is tuned to emulate say your full suspension Juggernaut pro, just hot rodded up with more power, but if I wanted to use it as a hunting bike to tow a trailer, etc. are the characteristics of the lower granny gears could easily be reset?
A suggestion: The whole question of pedal feel/rideability as a bicycle for those of us who don’t use the throttle much (I have a Zero DSR for that) might be partially answered if you arranged for some well known outside reviewers like Court and his cohorts to review your prototypes.
I don't want to quibble over a matter of semantics but by “bike-like experience” my interpretation is that the main power to the ground man-machine interface is through the pedals just like the bike the Wright Brothers rode long ago. The human factors problem is more like controlling the power to an artificial limb (i.e. your legs) with enough feedback to remain linear (i.e. no oscillation as you pedal,”jerkiness, etc.) so you can sense and modulate the amplification factor intuitively. Controlling this via a hand throttle breaks this loop. Throttles are fine, especially for many styles of bikes like scramblers not really meant to be pedaled, if that's what you love to ride.I really get confused as to why so many claim that you can't use a throttle and still get a "bike-like" ride experience. I have an ebike that has both throttle and PAS and I found that riding it in throttle mode was the only way I could get the assist level I wanted in every riding situation and once I got use to idea of riding as a bike my control of the throttle became 2nd nature. This is just my opinion but I just don't think any amount of sensors and programming will enable a PAS to provide the assist that is best for all riding situations (I think it's more about programmer's ego thinking they can do this better than the rider with a throttle....good luck with that dream).
I think too many riders think that an ebike with a throttle means something you don't pedal....it's just provides the option to not have to pedal but I assure everyone that you can combine rider and motor power (via throttle) and have a bike like riding experience. Don't drink the marketing koolaid that a torque sensing PAS is needed or better than a throttle. I'm not saying that PAS is bad but I truly question the merits when compared to the simplicity of a throttle and how quickly your brain adapts to blending assist and leg power.
I have a different take on that, based on personal preference.I really get confused as to why so many claim that you can't use a throttle and still get a "bike-like" ride experience. I have an ebike that has both throttle and PAS and I found that riding it in throttle mode was the only way I could get the assist level I wanted in every riding situation and once I got use to idea of riding as a bike my control of the throttle became 2nd nature. This is just my opinion but I just don't think any amount of sensors and programming will enable a PAS to provide the assist that is best for all riding situations (I think it's more about programmer's ego thinking they can do this better than the rider with a throttle....good luck with that dream).
I think too many riders think that an ebike with a throttle means something you don't pedal....it's just provides the option to not have to pedal but I assure everyone that you can combine rider and motor power (via throttle) and have a bike like riding experience. Don't drink the marketing koolaid that a torque sensing PAS is needed or better than a throttle. I'm not saying that PAS is bad but I truly question the merits when compared to the simplicity of a throttle and how quickly your brain adapts to blending assist and leg power.
160 mm is pretty short on the crank arms.
Where can the alloy sprockets be sourced and can the motor sprocket be changed without special tools by the owner?
How much pedaling drag in the motor unassist mode?
Weight of the bike?
$20 shipping on the reservation? Must be canadian exchange rate.
Are you saying PAS is just not available yet, or that it will never be an option for the Off-road version (unrestricted) version of the bike?Note: Off-road edition XD is throttle-only, no PAS included. We really like these with RH twist throttles. The complete PAS system will be revealed fairly soon, and should be optional by Summer.
Sounds goodPAS will be an option for the Off-road edition.