Tiny 1kW Electric Bike Motor

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2022
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,9K

  • @justuslm
    @justuslm Před rokem +9458

    When it comes to the motor getting hot, remember that drone motors are designed to have what's essentially an overpowered cooling fan blowing directly onto them at all times...

    • @pterodox123
      @pterodox123 Před rokem +864

      Just add a prop to this design!

    • @h3Xh3Xh3X
      @h3Xh3Xh3X Před rokem +657

      Also the ebike motor has a lot more metal mass to dissipate the built up heat

    • @borislipschitz2740
      @borislipschitz2740 Před rokem +462

      My first thought, on the first seconds of watching the video was literally "this thing is gonna smoke itself to death at anything near 1kW without that prop". Guess it did better than i thought it would.

    • @tychormthorp
      @tychormthorp Před rokem +61

      @@pterodox123 clutch fan style, maybe put a small prop on the end of the spindle? Transverse mount?

    • @jakubzelenak330
      @jakubzelenak330 Před rokem +74

      surely you could just add a small funnel at the front of the bike to divert some air to go right next to the motor to cool it, no?

  • @DoRC
    @DoRC Před rokem +413

    Something that you didn't mention that's important to consider is that you're probably losing 20% of that power to drive train losses going through that much reduction. Also the drone motor is designed to have a constant stream of airflow on it from flying through the air and the propeller. I bet if you double the size that motor again at a fan to it you really have something.

    • @GigsVT
      @GigsVT Před rokem +30

      20 seems high. chains are close to lossless and belts are like 95%.

    • @jeremoisde9928
      @jeremoisde9928 Před rokem +10

      Yeah you have Sommething, unless you go uphill and the Motor Burns😂

    • @ChatNoirLe
      @ChatNoirLe Před rokem +4

      From the multiple stages you lose 15-25% depending, a GT2 belt is about 95%, while a chain is better if in perfect setup and condition, or a bunch worse if else.

    • @DoRC
      @DoRC Před rokem +13

      @@GigsVT that depends. The faster the belt is moving the greater the loss. You've got one stage moving extremely rapidly and other stage behind that plus the chain. The 3D printed pulleys are probably a bit less efficient than Mass manufactured ones due to the additional friction of the layer lines etc. I was figuring around 8 or 9% for the fastest stage another 5-6 for the next stage and then a few percent for the chain. Youve also got six or so rubber sealed bearings in there which are going to cost a percent or so each.
      By those numbers 20% is actually generous.

    • @DoRC
      @DoRC Před rokem +4

      @@ChatNoirLe dont forget about six or so rubber sealed bearings at around a percent each.

  • @Onespica
    @Onespica Před rokem +234

    Never expected such a small motor to output such insane power. Cool video!

    • @GewelReal
      @GewelReal Před 2 měsíci

      0 torque tho

    • @bozzalnw5357
      @bozzalnw5357 Před 2 měsíci +3

      this is why EVs better than ICE

    • @GewelReal
      @GewelReal Před 2 měsíci +6

      @@bozzalnw5357 electric engines*
      EVs suck with their god awful batteries

    • @bozzalnw5357
      @bozzalnw5357 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@GewelReal thank for info. but who asked?

    • @walnutkraken9430
      @walnutkraken9430 Před měsícem +8

      @@bozzalnw5357Do you get tired of hearing clown music when you type?

  • @Johny40Se7en
    @Johny40Se7en Před rokem +158

    Cool idea. Consider adding an aerodynamic duct to channel air through the little electric motor. So the faster you go, the more air it'll get over it, maybe add a little Noctua fan to it too. Should be fine 😉

    • @Kimoto504
      @Kimoto504 Před 9 měsíci +12

      Cooling is definitely what's needed but passive cooling won't be enough, as seen here. They'll need some sort of impeller to force air through the motor. On drones they have the props but that's under a far, far lighter load and there's no structure obstructing air flow like on the bike. Having a good impeller pulling air through the motor and kicking it out is probably the most effective approach here.

    • @Johny40Se7en
      @Johny40Se7en Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Kimoto504 That's where the brilliant Noctua fan comes in. They move a lot of air and are damn near silent too =)

    • @yatzeegamingop
      @yatzeegamingop Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@Johny40Se7en You need watercooling for this motor to work properly. These motors heat up soooo much even in proper use.

    • @Johny40Se7en
      @Johny40Se7en Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@yatzeegamingop A watercooling system would add unnecessary weight though, and copper does corrode, so you'd have to add a heatsink that was attached to the water cooling set up and make sure the copper doesn't get wet. Again though, it would just add complexity to it. Just having a duct made of carbon fibre or even aluminium, then perhaps a 60mm Noctua fan to force air through the motor would be ideal.

    • @yatzeegamingop
      @yatzeegamingop Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@Johny40Se7en Dude, i am saying even 85mph of ram air is not enough to cool the motors on my racing drone at full power. Why won't you try to understand it ? It's not a 150W cpu, it's a freaking 900W motor.
      Or better yet, use a hub motor. Like how it was intended.
      Also inrunner brushless motors have watercooling jackets used in ground vehicles. Tom was just stupid in using an outrunner.

  • @snjert8406
    @snjert8406 Před rokem +630

    I'm actually impressed at the fact that the motors didn't immediately combust, especially the second one. Wow.

    • @3ala2Aldeen
      @3ala2Aldeen Před rokem +9

      I did short 0.8 mm copper wire to a led acid battery, it glow red but still one piece
      If you wondered why I did that
      I needed to burn the isolation of the wire 🤣

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers Před rokem +21

      @@3ala2Aldeen stop stealing copper wires

    • @R.Daneel
      @R.Daneel Před rokem +12

      Agreed. This is damn-near a commercial for those motors.

    • @leonordin3052
      @leonordin3052 Před rokem +1

      More impressive that the esc didn't burst

    • @jakegarrett8109
      @jakegarrett8109 Před rokem

      @@toolbaggers He might have been electroplating something with the copper.

  • @Maxzillian
    @Maxzillian Před rokem +255

    Arguably one of the biggest issues is none of these power ratings are accompanied by a duty cycle. Just like comparing the tractor to the GTR, the 1000w hub motor can handle that peak power demand for much longer durations than the drone motor.
    Still, it's absolutely hilarious to see such a tiny motor do all that work. Nicely done!

    • @mhenlopotter1612
      @mhenlopotter1612 Před rokem +7

      Yup that motor is impressive asf!

    • @drkastenbrot
      @drkastenbrot Před rokem +28

      The drone motor power rating is continuous, but its measured with a prop attached. At that power and size it would have airflow around 150-200mph, staying at a equilibrium stator temperature of around 60 celsius. Drone motors are designed to be as light as possible, and they can get away with it because of that airflow.

    • @srck4035
      @srck4035 Před rokem +6

      @Hash Frowns it's 100 percent with a prop on

    • @Maxzillian
      @Maxzillian Před rokem +5

      @@drkastenbrot It would be interesting to see a new pulley printed with an impeller to help draw some air through the motor, but at the end of the day it's asking a lot from some dubious ratings.

    • @drkastenbrot
      @drkastenbrot Před rokem +11

      @@Maxzillian the only smart thing would be using a motor appropriate for the application. rc boat motors are similarly power dense but they use watercooling to get rid of the heat. much easier to provide than 100+mph of air and the torque is also more appropriate for driving a bike.

  • @americansongdog
    @americansongdog Před rokem +102

    Just as a thought you can run 2 motors through a gearbox together to drive a belt. At that point you can either extend the lifespan of the movers or add another reduction for more consistent performance. A better heatsink would also do you wonders on those usually air cooled moters. A water jacket would be super cool to see

    • @tech_universe1218
      @tech_universe1218 Před rokem +3

      Had the same thought after watching the video. Maybe another video trying it out would be awesome

    • @imperialsecuritybureau6037
      @imperialsecuritybureau6037 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yeah as they’re made to be used with a propeller they’re designed with the expectation of LOTS of cooling being available… mounting a fan on the shaft (if there’s still room after the pulley) will help a lot with the temperature and performance. And yes a geared system would be great. There could be 4 or more arrayed around a central gear (>4 pinions driving one gear) and it wouldn’t take up too much room if done right. That would make for an impressive machine… but would require 4 ESCs as well. Still, pretty cheap way to do things!

    • @imperialsecuritybureau6037
      @imperialsecuritybureau6037 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Also the watercooling is an option on larger motors of this type, from the 6384 (63mm dia, 84mm long) up I believe, I.e. the 80100, 83100, 12090, 120100, 154120 etc.

    • @SodiumSyndicate
      @SodiumSyndicate Před 9 měsíci

      all of that is expensive, heavy, unreliable and inefficient compared to a simple hub motor@@imperialsecuritybureau6037

    • @aozoraaoi3745
      @aozoraaoi3745 Před 7 měsíci

      but you add more step = add more loss.enegy

  • @TedBackus
    @TedBackus Před rokem +10

    as a kid, i had a bike, that had a electric motor on it, & it worked amazingly well. this was in 1985, im certain you could do it easily with modern tech. the one i had, was a traditional bike, with a normal pedal driven chain, but the electric motor was mounted above the front tire. it had a lever, that when you pushed , it would lower the drive wheel which was directly mounted on the motor, onto the front tire. it worked very well

    • @bet8467
      @bet8467 Před měsícem

      Did it have enough torque?

  • @NicholasRehm
    @NicholasRehm Před rokem +1739

    Ahh yes, the age old drone motor sniff test. Never fails to indicate that something's not quite right

    • @elknackebroto7447
      @elknackebroto7447 Před rokem +17

      well if a fuse or w/e part of electronics blows there is a very distinct smell

    • @OGSumo
      @OGSumo Před rokem +28

      I’d know that smell anywhere: Magic Smoke!

    • @elknackebroto7447
      @elknackebroto7447 Před rokem

      ​@@OGSumo this is what u call the smoke in u momas room after she used that weird glass pipe right

    • @RoySATX
      @RoySATX Před rokem +12

      I call that the "Touch and Sniff" method. If either your finger or nose gets burned something is going wrong!

    • @03056932
      @03056932 Před rokem +2

      @@elknackebroto7447 it's the insulations on the coil

  • @PowerScissor
    @PowerScissor Před rokem +365

    I can't even guess how many times I've been holding one of my racing drone motors wondering if I could power my bike with it.
    After some quick gearing calculations in my head, I think nobody has the time to do that...and BAM, here's the exact video!

  • @GRBtutorials
    @GRBtutorials Před rokem +84

    I think part of the reason the first motor didn’t work well is that drone motors are sensorless, so it needs no sensors, but it doesn’t work well at low speeds, making it stall, which resulted in the coils burning out.
    You could try with a sensored motor (with a corresponding sensored ESC), but those tend to be larger and more expensive.

    • @cebruthius
      @cebruthius Před rokem +12

      Don't these rely on the airflow from the propeller for cooling?

    • @XLR8bg
      @XLR8bg Před rokem

      ​@@cebruthius I wonder how much airflow they get from the propellers, considering the blades usually start outside of the perimeter of the motor. I have an Air 2 drone and above the motor are the two 2 pins that hold the 2 blades of the propeller.

    • @cebruthius
      @cebruthius Před rokem +2

      @@XLR8bg Induced airflow I'm pretty sure

    • @wtfiswiththosehandles
      @wtfiswiththosehandles Před rokem +6

      Nah, it was moving with no stalling/cogging, so it was fine. Windings were burning because of high sustained current. That motor can do 1000W only for short periods, with such thin wires and low voltage it is not designed to survive operating at actual 1000W for any longer period of time.

    • @YolandaPlayne
      @YolandaPlayne Před 6 měsíci

      Dude didn't even inflate his bike tires, he's not going to understand you.

  • @justinr9784
    @justinr9784 Před měsícem +1

    "You need one of those little bobbins there sitting up there like that" - British Engineers

  • @noahagnew6517
    @noahagnew6517 Před rokem +252

    A long while ago I did the math and it was cheaper to use 50 drone motors than one large motor for a car. Never really thought of what would happen. Good to know

    • @ziad_jkhan
      @ziad_jkhan Před rokem +27

      Would love to have a look at how you arrived at that conclusion

    • @barklet6110
      @barklet6110 Před rokem +11

      If they're at retail price then probably, as you are paying for brand name car parts vs cheep drone motorcycle

    • @tysemilicia3931
      @tysemilicia3931 Před rokem +12

      There’s no way because how could u possibly set that up, there would be so many gears and stuff that something would have to go wrong, plus syncing them up together would be near improbable aside from the battery and wiring situation

    • @tacct1kk715
      @tacct1kk715 Před rokem +3

      Definitely not

    • @xaytana
      @xaytana Před rokem +17

      @@tysemilicia3931 Using encoders and a bit of logic could sync them fairly nicely; though all the motors would be mechanically synced across the set, if you send an identical pulse to each motor it should work as is, you'd just lose efficiencies to disparities in the individual motors as varies in manufacturing would cause this. As for how to have a 50 input single output setup, I'm not really sure, typically planetary gearboxes with motor-driven planets and a held carrier is a good way to link 3+ inputs, but 50 is a bit ridiculous; though with the size of drone motors, maybe a stack of planetaries could work, say 7 motors on one planetary and 7 planetaries into a final planetary, it's only 49 motors but I don't think a single motor would make a huge difference, considering that the sun is typically freespinning as the ring has more versatile use, the sun could be missing for all the system cares, a planetary of this design isn't too far outside of what could be probable. It'd take up quite a bit of space, but so does a proper EV motor at scale. It's not practical at all, and the gearset would massively offset cost benefits, but if someone was crazy enough to attempt a system like this, it would be theoretically probable within this setup that minimizes the amount of gears each motor interacts with. Alternatively a serpentine belt could be feasible, but would probably experience too much friction to be practical, but could also nicely interface with the output more directly; though it'd be interesting to see a double-sided belt and have motors replace idlers, which could minimize friction, damn near cut friction components in half even, as you'd otherwise need a lot of idlers to ensure a proper amount of contact on each pulley in the setup. Again, not practical, but not theoretically improbable.
      I almost want someone to test it, especially the serpentine belt method, just to show how gloriously stupid the idea is. But this also doesn't explore the nightmare that the driver board would be, that itself would have to be its own rabbit hole of stupidity.

  • @StuffMadeHere
    @StuffMadeHere Před rokem +2150

    If would be awesome if you built a little bike dyno to see how much mechanical power you're actually getting out. Might actually be worthwhile with all the bike propulsion projects you get up to 😉
    EDIT: On second thought, you could EASILY retrofit a bike power meter to do this. Check out powertap hubs. You could build one into a little drum for dynoing anything with a wheel...

    • @courtneyconaway3091
      @courtneyconaway3091 Před rokem +47

      We know what project you’ll be spending the next few months on now

    • @vintyprod
      @vintyprod Před rokem +48

      I want a collab of you two

    • @MrYrodz
      @MrYrodz Před rokem +83

      I can't believe you still have time to watch CZcams.

    • @TreyShawn42
      @TreyShawn42 Před rokem +2

      I wonder what you would do to add your own spin on an E-bike!

    • @vintyprod
      @vintyprod Před rokem +15

      @@TreyShawn42 wife mode

  • @olmstead25
    @olmstead25 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I have always wondered about doing this. I thought it would be best to use a motor designed for a electric helecopter though as the case is designed with a fan to help cool the motor.

  • @BillDemos
    @BillDemos Před rokem

    Nice that you thought about it and built it. Thanks for so nice content. I went though all the stress with you I can say, when knowing that you are building something with pulleys that is going to compete against a direct drive setup... They only other way do do it with a tiny motor, i.e. lower the speed and up the torque would be by increasing its radius, which would mean you would end up with the direct drive motor you have in the first place on the eBike. Best regards.

  • @Amy_A.
    @Amy_A. Před rokem +404

    A big part of drone motors is that they need the cooling from the drone blades to keep from overheating. I wonder if you could get it functioning more long-term if you added some kind of cooling fan, either directly on the motor like a drone blade would be, or as an external fan directed through the coils. Fun video, thanks for making it!

    • @asandax6
      @asandax6 Před rokem +19

      Or building some heat sink to drain the heat.

    • @pe5erbarnes
      @pe5erbarnes Před rokem +16

      @@asandax6 a heatsink is difficult, because the outside of the rotor is spinning. The only bit that doesn't spin is the inside and the base, which isn't a lot of area to add a heatsink to

    • @enginerdy
      @enginerdy Před rokem +26

      The other aspect is that the data sheet is probably lying, giving peak power instead of continuous

    • @Chuckiele
      @Chuckiele Před rokem +3

      maybe liquid cooling :D

    • @diodazelena3330
      @diodazelena3330 Před rokem +8

      still would burn out, in drone the motor is always spinning with maximum speed because there is basically no inertia, but on bike the acceleration is very long and hard and when not spinning at maximum speed, the air volume generated by fan is severely decreased. Also i seriously doubt, that these small motors are rated for this output power in continuous S1 cycle.

  • @homemade_madness
    @homemade_madness Před rokem +342

    Yes! i always love it when you combine bikes and stupid ideas!🤣🤣 worked pretty good for such a small motor tough!

  • @muhammadniyaz4039
    @muhammadniyaz4039 Před 8 měsíci

    Its amazing what gears can do to the resulting load torque. What a satisfying invention u guys made.👏

  • @OnlyUglytroll
    @OnlyUglytroll Před 7 měsíci +1

    Dude... I have been watching your vids... you are great. I love how you approach things

  • @ToastyMozart
    @ToastyMozart Před rokem +64

    You can definitely tell the motors were designed for different applications.
    Quadcopter motors like that are built for high speed power rather than low-end torque, expect a *lot* of airflow for cooling, and aren't really meant to be running at max output for extended periods of time.

  • @hz8711
    @hz8711 Před rokem +114

    I think you should add more drone motors to the point where it beats the original ebike, and compare the price of parts used after that.
    Great video, thank you!

    • @loddude5706
      @loddude5706 Před rokem +12

      2 wheel drive? Rim mounted ring gear . . . how many motors CAN you fit per wheel? : )

    • @CouchPotator
      @CouchPotator Před rokem +3

      also compare the weight!

    • @dontreadmyusername6787
      @dontreadmyusername6787 Před rokem +3

      I had the same thought and in addition to that adding more drone batteries can result in increased range since they are light and small

    • @anthonyrstrawbridge
      @anthonyrstrawbridge Před rokem +5

      Yes, I agree because I'm just too lazy to do so myself. I like the idea of exploring motor rpm and torque without the use of a speed controller. Using switches and hard wiring three motors in differing wiring schemes for example: S1 3M Series,
      S2 2M Series, S3 1-2-3 Parallel. It would also be interesting to observe the voltage drop of series wired motors in comparison with increasing bus voltages. It worked well for traction motors on locomotives. Quite frankly I like the idea of not needing a speed controller but it would also be interesting to experiment with.

    • @ljadf
      @ljadf Před rokem +2

      I had the same thought, if one motor can do that, two might actually beat the hub motor, and a small fan might then be enough to cool them down.

  • @istvandeak8232
    @istvandeak8232 Před měsícem

    With this video I've learned a lot! Now I can understand the ammout of scams in the marketings of E-scooters & E-bike! And it was very usefull in my plans to build my own E-motorbike! Thank you sooooo much! Keep up with the work! ;)

  • @scottrich976
    @scottrich976 Před rokem +4

    There are some of those motors with a fan milled into the end bell. Still Going to get hot but will aid the cooling

  • @a.p.2356
    @a.p.2356 Před rokem +151

    The coolest part about this isn't that a teeny little drone motor can power an e-bike (briefly); the coolest part is that with a motor that tiny, you could absolutely figure out how to hook several up at the same time. That would keep the temperature down a bit by virtue of not having to run it absolutely balls out all the time, and it would make that thing go like a stabbed rat.

    • @balasmj
      @balasmj Před rokem

      What a marvelous idea 👍👍

    • @lukerobinson3983
      @lukerobinson3983 Před rokem +2

      Exactly what I was thinking whilst watching pack 4 together 2 on each side and it could be pretty impressive and still very light

    • @kingmasterlord
      @kingmasterlord Před rokem +2

      can you say extruded aluminum cable drive exo suit?

    • @johntordurkviltsevdal8214
      @johntordurkviltsevdal8214 Před rokem +2

      Then you could just as well get a bigger motor

    • @lukerobinson3983
      @lukerobinson3983 Před rokem

      @@johntordurkviltsevdal8214 I think it would still be lighter than the equivalent power

  • @nathantron
    @nathantron Před rokem +222

    You should try using 4 of those motors in a star belt tensioned configuration and see how a distributed load could handle it. You might be able to get the gearing a bit closer to perfect too.

    • @DJRCMACH
      @DJRCMACH Před rokem +8

      this exactly, reduces friction could be run bearing on rotating shaft compound belt reduction and better torque for the real world effects of friction.....and simply 4kw would be more appropriate for load because you don't tow caravans with Fiat 500's

    • @Der_Fussel
      @Der_Fussel Před rokem +6

      Kinda a good idea but then you could just get the standard e-bike motor if we are talking about the size ^^.

    • @fkthewhat
      @fkthewhat Před rokem

      I had a more rudimentary thought of ‘I wonder if multiple motors distributed somehow could work’ and I’d be keen to see it too!

  • @BruceS42
    @BruceS42 Před rokem +5

    For such extreme gearing, have you considered using a worm gear? That would only work one way, but for taking a very high-speed input and producing a much more manageable output, it should be good. Anyway, fun video, and well considered project. I look forward to more.

  • @kaleidscope927
    @kaleidscope927 Před 7 měsíci

    I like your curiosity and how you did that practical .

  • @wrathofsocrus
    @wrathofsocrus Před rokem +311

    The starting current is going to be much higher than it would ever encounter on a drone. It would likely last longer if you pedal up to speed before applying throttle. Given the power losses through the drivetrain vs a direct drive hub motor, comparing the power draw of each motor doesn't tell the whole story. The race at the end was more informative than simply listing peak current draw. Great video!

    • @rennethjarrett4580
      @rennethjarrett4580 Před rokem +7

      That was part of my concern/idea, but they should have put a slip clutch on that motor, or one of the belt/gear wheels so when peddling you are not spinning that motor super fast.

    • @HaloWolf102
      @HaloWolf102 Před rokem +3

      This would likely be a speed bike, not a recreational one. A recreational one would include very high torque, and low speed. Because people don't like going up hills.

    • @remirms2239
      @remirms2239 Před rokem +3

      Indeed, with a proper starter though, you could limit this issue greatly.

    • @Geniusinventor
      @Geniusinventor Před rokem +4

      How about using 2 or 3 drone motors that will Split the Load and make it go even faster or make it accelerate faster

    • @remirms2239
      @remirms2239 Před rokem +4

      @@Geniusinventor That won't really make a big difference, plus you'll need some sort of reduction mechanism then, which will make it quite a bit more complex.
      Easier for him to have a chip in there that spreads the current over a longer time, like how they do it with starters on AC electromotors.

  • @Gosuminer
    @Gosuminer Před rokem +166

    Awesome experiment. I suspect the problem lies more in the ESC than in the motor itself, because drone ESCs are designed to reach a given speed, not just to apply power. So with such a big inertia of a bike plus rider the motor is commanded to reach a target speed which it cannot achieve for several seconds. Also, drone motors are designed to run only one second on full power because by then the drone will be accelerated and the props unloaded.

    • @54l68l65l20l47l61l6D
      @54l68l65l20l47l61l6D Před rokem +17

      probably get a lot more air cooling on a drone too

    • @chrisbraswell8864
      @chrisbraswell8864 Před rokem +2

      Probably way off on gear ratio need another 4 to 1 or about.

    • @jakegarrett8109
      @jakegarrett8109 Před rokem

      Depends on the motors efficiency mostly. If you get a really efficient one, they don't heat up much (example, you may measure 1000w from one, and 1050w on another for the same output, and if that output is 990w mechanical then one is going to be heating up 6x faster and may burn out while the other will run till the bearings wear out without over-heating). Its impressive just how much a few design changes affect those motors, and modern race motors are probably nearing the limits especially when you compare to the older generation (flat magnets, multi-strand coils, bigger magnet to stator gaps), its a HUGE difference.
      Yes I test motors until destruction, measuring mechanical efficiency, case temp, current and torque curves, thrust efficiency with different props etc. I've been testing motors to destruction just for fun before I ever was paid to do it (that's not my primary job, just one of them).
      I will say you can also change the timing on pretty much any ESC within the last decade, so if you're having issues with that most of them you can change just listening to beeps and inputting throttle to program, or if they are 32 bit then new flight controllers can usually do a flash passthrough.

    • @lilvenaz
      @lilvenaz Před rokem +1

      Are there ESC made for this task? Or one has to go on a limb to design one?

    • @jakegarrett8109
      @jakegarrett8109 Před rokem

      @@lilvenaz They sell them in any size you want. Want them water cooled? Buy a model boat ESC. Want it power limiting? They've got those too.
      ESC probably won't even be very warm, they have extremely tiny ones that run 4 motors at about 60 amps (each) that are less than an ounce. The thing that gets hot is the motor. Like I said above, all of them allow changing parameters like startup/advance timings, some allow braking levels etc.

  • @despectablebosshandlemantle
    @despectablebosshandlemantle Před 7 měsíci

    That is freaking awesome! More more more videos with that tiny motor! Cooooooooooool...

  • @eliasstubenrauch7672
    @eliasstubenrauch7672 Před rokem +1

    Now i want to see you build a drone with the Motor of the ebike. Great video and a ridiculous build :D

  • @chrisrathjan1501
    @chrisrathjan1501 Před rokem +391

    In my experience drone motors are rated using phase amps while ebikes use battery amps. Short duration peak pulse vs RMS continuous or average power. Would have been interesting to see how much battery power they were each using.

    • @zaxmaxlax
      @zaxmaxlax Před rokem +29

      Its peak current(60s) according to the manufacturer. Theres no away that tiny motor with tiny wires can sustain 50Amps.

    • @deadmantwen
      @deadmantwen Před rokem +4

      ​@@zaxmaxlax once the load is going motors draw less amps. so at max speed or finishing acceleration they're not pulling 50 amps to keep going.

    • @erikd6124
      @erikd6124 Před rokem

      @@zaxmaxlax motor W and Amps aren't realiably. They aren't measured the same. The weight of a brushless motor is a better indicator of its actual power, then it's specified watts and Amps ratings. Then comes the kv and V of course too

    • @zaxmaxlax
      @zaxmaxlax Před rokem +3

      @@erikd6124 The datasheet tells pretty much anything you need to know.

    • @neilcollins5224
      @neilcollins5224 Před rokem

      Torque to speed.

  • @ssj3gohan456
    @ssj3gohan456 Před rokem +99

    Fun fact: early e-bike motors used to use this kind of arrangement. They had pretty tiny outrunner motors (but configured differently to deal with high startup current - also way better cooling) and a 1 or 2-stage reduction gear, often planetary, to the casing. But as it turns out, once you factor in sufficient allowances for cooling, enough metal to transfer the forces between the axle and spokes and all that, they weren't *that* light. Typically around the 1.5kg mark for a 250W motor.
    These ended up going out of fashion because of the noise. Used to be commonplace though, I'd say about 50% of pre-2010 e-bikes used this arrangement.

    • @nathansgreen
      @nathansgreen Před rokem +1

      So if you wanted the lightest possible setup, make something like this with a temperature sensor kill module to keep the motor from burning up.

    • @parth_sisodiya
      @parth_sisodiya Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/LUVro3gXmF4/video.html

    • @luminousfractal420
      @luminousfractal420 Před rokem

      I wonder if anyone's tried solenoids as pistons? They can pack a hell of a lot of force into a tiny thing.

    • @pieterveenders9793
      @pieterveenders9793 Před rokem

      I was going to mention, if they wanted to try and make their e-bike work with a brushless outrunner they should have used a planetary gear, after all they easily do between 1:50 and 1:100 in a single step and produce massive increases in torque for it. Plus the planetary gear would fit rather nicely in the hub of a bicycle wheel.

    • @feilox
      @feilox Před rokem

      Thanks for the info. I was wondering where the small motors and extra gears went? now with the new single hub motor e-bikes china has been mass producing. I suppose they are def. more efficient. My only question is why dual motor bicycles don't go nearly twice as fast?

  • @noneya574
    @noneya574 Před 4 měsíci

    Make a mounting with 2-3 of them on geared belts and set it up on the pedal sprocket like most mid drive systems. Could make a pretty strong, fast, easy to install set up. Build the whole thing on some metal plate cut to match the triangle bike frame, mount it, then run a chain to the pedal sprocket. Then cover it all up sheet metal/platic when you have it all dialed in.

  • @waynenewberry1032
    @waynenewberry1032 Před rokem +3

    Fun trial- I know its late, but modeling fan blades into the first pulley would help with cooling.

  • @tims8524
    @tims8524 Před rokem +337

    These motors normally operate at high RPM. The back-EMF generated at high RPM sets a dynamic limit for coil current. At low RPM/high torque, the coil current is not self-limiting - and unless the controller is programmed to limit current draw, your motor will burn

    • @tomaszwota1465
      @tomaszwota1465 Před rokem +12

      But isn't it still running on high RPM when the throttle is in full deflection? Otherwise what are the gears for?

    • @someonespotatohmm9513
      @someonespotatohmm9513 Před rokem +24

      @@tomaszwota1465 When the bike is going yes, but not when it is standing (nearly still). The other issues is that it is not mounted on a drone blasting plenty of cool air over the motor, which the designers assumed would be the case.

    • @randomguydoes2901
      @randomguydoes2901 Před rokem +2

      @@tomaszwota1465 it has a total of one single gear and the only way to switch is to get off and replace one of the sprockets

    • @tomaszwota1465
      @tomaszwota1465 Před rokem +2

      @@randomguydoes2901 I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about the gearwheels that are there to "reduce" the RPM and "increase" torque. I get that there's one "gear" or "speed", or however you'd call it.
      I may be stupid, but I'm not blind. I just don't necessarily know the right terminology. ;)

    • @tomaszwota1465
      @tomaszwota1465 Před rokem +2

      @@someonespotatohmm9513 that air cooling aspect I didn't really take into consideration, but I guess you're right.
      Do you think this would be the dominant issue with this unorthodox application of the second motor?
      I mean, it may be 1000W (or thereabouts) but that's still a lot of torque that it needs to speed up a bike and a chunky rider on it.

  • @AlexanderBurgers
    @AlexanderBurgers Před rokem +22

    Brushless RC motors can typically run at somewhere between 3 to 5 watt per gram, depending on the efficiency and duty cycle and cooling. An actual 1kw motor would therefore be more in the range of 200 to 333 gram, or more. This 40 gram motor would realistically be a 150-200 watt motor. Like you said, it's the electrical rating, perhaps they just figured short circuit current * battery voltage = power or something, or just claim bigger numbers because bigger number = sell more units. A slightly bigger RC motor can totally power an e-bike without melting. :)

    • @KoeiNL
      @KoeiNL Před rokem +1

      Considering how many amps these things pull the rating can be accurate. The ESC's that control these motors can be like 50A (with higher burst) and use 6S battery packs (22.2V nominal voltage), so if you go full throttle and pull over a 1000W. And you need those kind of ESC's, because if you don't they will just go up in smoke. You can also easily figure out how much watt they are pulling by just seeing how long it takes to run down xxx mah on your battery. Remember, these motors have 5" cooling fan sitting on top of them in use and are on an object traveling somewhere in the region of 120-160kph. Still I wouldn't run that at full power for long ;). Here is a short video that really shows what kind of insane performance you get from these motors: czcams.com/users/shortsIZ091JnsDAs

    • @LuLeBe
      @LuLeBe Před rokem +1

      @@KoeiNL I think you can't just measure battery usage because that's an average, acceleration takes mich more power. And the power requirements for these short periods can be quite insane but they can't keep that up for longer. If they had continuous 1000w that would also mean around 100-200w of heat output, that can't be cooled without a fancy heatsink. I have some RC cars, they have 120A 6S ESCs so up to 120*25=3000W and obviously the RC car doesn't empty a 5000mah battery within 2.5 minutes.
      The batteries also couldn't handle the load if it was continuous.

    • @skeezixmccat
      @skeezixmccat Před rokem

      I'd love to see a bike powered by an 8s Xmaxx power system 🤣 I bet the bike could do wheelies lol

    • @KoeiNL
      @KoeiNL Před rokem

      @@LuLeBe Doh, of course it can't run at 1kW until the battery is drained. But the peak power hits 1kW no problem, and because of the fans and the speed the thing is moving at the heat is less of an issue than on RC cars where the engine isn't getting direct airflow and reaches lower speeds. Battery would be something like 6s 2200mah with a 40C constant rating. That's 88A continuously. so a little over 1900W continuously with much higher peaks. You are probably looking at about half of that as an average when flying freestyle or racing which would result in an empty battery in 4 minutes (you will never completely drain it of course).

  • @georgegates526
    @georgegates526 Před rokem

    Thanks a LOT for the technical information!!! I had a heck of a time to find any gear ratio formulas that were simple enough for me to use. So at least now I know I don't want the bicycle wheel to go faster than 300 rpm. (I'm not looking for speed.

  • @codescholar7345
    @codescholar7345 Před 9 měsíci

    Very cool! I was thinking of a very similar idea whilst biking up a very long mountain climb.

  • @AmirSaboury
    @AmirSaboury Před rokem +24

    This is one of the coolest thing I've seen in a long time! Good work!

    • @robinson4470
      @robinson4470 Před rokem +5

      How did you reply 2 days before it was posted?

    • @AmirSaboury
      @AmirSaboury Před rokem

      You can join his patreon for early access: www.patreon.com/tomstanton

    • @0m1d
      @0m1d Před rokem

      There are better and cooler projects in CZcams you just have to have time to watch and research.

    • @robinson4470
      @robinson4470 Před rokem

      @@unnamed47 ahhh that's right

  • @TheFurious74
    @TheFurious74 Před rokem +28

    And still when you look at this motor size... That's impressive!
    Such a tiny thing can pool a man on bike at 30 km/h!

    • @TremereTT
      @TremereTT Před rokem +4

      it's like Super Sport motorbikes. these tiny engines are basically used up in a few years because 10000 rpm are just not a sustainable thing.

  • @Boodoo4You
    @Boodoo4You Před 9 měsíci

    5:43 Ooh that’s a nice Breitling Chronomat! Very nice.

  • @jasonmillner6416
    @jasonmillner6416 Před rokem

    that is incredible! The power density!

  • @iandavidson99
    @iandavidson99 Před rokem +53

    Would've been nice to have had a power meter inline to see out how much power the ebike and the drone-motor ebike were *actually* pulling

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers Před rokem

      Watt meters for testing the drone motors are actually pretty cheap.

    • @genioee
      @genioee Před rokem +1

      @@toolbaggers Sadly, as tom indicated this can give you only an estimate. The mechanical power would be interesting - you'd have to measure the output torque and velocity. But using some sort of drag-race can give a rough estimate of these quantities (at least in comparison, due to friction and weight...).

  • @SeabornNomad
    @SeabornNomad Před 9 měsíci

    put one on each wheel now!! haha this is absolutely marvellous. great work as always tom!

  • @dushyantpathak5564
    @dushyantpathak5564 Před měsícem +2

    Bro you make it possible i was laughing hard after the first attempt like your cameraman hats off to your hardwork

  • @alanrowe8233
    @alanrowe8233 Před rokem +173

    Love the fact that you have given it a go, very impressed with the sheer small-ness of the motor and it actually drives a human along! I notice you have 'skinny' tyres and a flat, smooth surface. Being a keen cyclist and being very aware of the leg-power needed at times, I dare say the motor would go 'phutt' if you had a hill and some more drag on the tyres! but keep up the experiments, fascinating to watch.

    • @alexmin4752
      @alexmin4752 Před rokem +11

      @will b IMO, it's not the motor that's lacking. Even if we assume the motor is EXTREMELY bad and has efficicency of 50% (which is atrociously low) you're still left with 500 watts. Meanwhile, all electric bikes in Europe have measly 250 watt motors (due to regulations) and they are still quite fast. What you need is a better reductor and torque delivery mechanism. Use a planetary reductor made of steel instead of plastic pulleys and belts, add a small propeller to cool the motor and it will run fine. Also, since the power vs RPM curve of such motors has a stark spike near to maxRPM, you'd want to connect the whole assembly in the same way as mid-drive ebikes are made so the motor could benefit from adjustable gears ratio (with the derailer). If you manage to keep it running at high RPM the bike will be fast as hell.

  • @jasonpatterson8091
    @jasonpatterson8091 Před rokem +70

    Very interesting. :-) My immediate thought when you said you were going to use a 1kW drone motor for an ebike was that it would cook itself. Even if it's 90% efficient it's still got to dissipate 100W of power as heat, and in such a small package without a spinning blade actively cooling the thing, it literally must get really hot really fast. I honestly didn't think it would last long enough to get going on the road (which kind of happened with v1), so I'm glad to be proven wrong on that count.

    • @niravapurv4578
      @niravapurv4578 Před rokem +1

      I dont think you got that right.
      I am not 100% sure, but I have read articles on eficiance of Electric cars Vs hydrocarbon/fossil fuel cars.
      And as i understood it the excess heat is basically the lost energy.
      A fossil fuel car is very less efficient(about 33%)(/67%is lost and is transformed to basicaly heat), therefor it generates heat.
      So a lot of the energy when burning the fuel in the pistons go directly to heat and is not helping to move the pistons. Newer cars thend to be more efficient those generating less heat.
      Electric cars have ofc a different system where electronmagnetic energy is used to generate circular movements that connects to the wheels... where some energy also is lost while transporting electrisity and also when charging, the energy lost in the process of moving the wheels on a electric car is very less(about 10%is lost and transeforms to heat)... thats why the engine creates less heat and electric cars tend to be very cold in the winther.
      Its the same on wolfram/glowing bulbs (dont know the right word in english) ... the energy lost in these bulbs are around or more than 90%, thous they get realy hot, while a buld witch use light emittind diods (led) has an efficiency of 50% or slightly better.. so they are many many times more efficient and create much less heat.
      Its very probable that the reason the small engine gets so hot is that the size of the engine is not ideal for how much resistance the engine will get when trying to move this bicycle the momentum inside the engine needed with this bicycle is higher to acctually get it to move than what you need in the engines of the drone.. its almost like you trying to drive a car on to high gear... thats why it moves slower and more energy is just lost and generates more heat than thrust although the engines can use same amout of watts, they are still designed to move a more heavy object (the bicycle) or a more light object (the drone). The engines in the drone is actually spinning in the air... so engine gets less resistance to get a very high rpm.

    • @niravapurv4578
      @niravapurv4578 Před rokem

      sorry, i read wrobg in your messag, i read 1000w as heat in instead of 100w.. ofc you are right.. if engine is electric and use 1kw.. the exsess energy is normaly around 100w (10%) tho i think it will be higher in this case depending on several factors like the gearing.. if this ebgine can work in a rpm area ideal for it.. and if the engine is strong enogh to handle this load/resistance.. according to different physical factors its likely that it will not opperate optimaly and lost energy to heat will be higher than normal.

  • @user-dy6re7qd5s
    @user-dy6re7qd5s Před rokem +1

    If you want to add some speed in the bicycle add some torque in it.
    I have an idea what if you start the bicycle with a motor that has torque in it to attain speed and then starts the second motor which has horsepower (1000 rounds per minute).
    EXPLANATION>>>>>>>>> at first the motor (which has torque in it ) will push the bicycle to attain velocity and then the second motor (which has horsepower in it) will improve the velocity in the bicycle.
    SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH

  • @diymaster101
    @diymaster101 Před rokem +1

    No going to lie that motor is really powerful my god I never expected it to be that good

  • @paddycunningham5011
    @paddycunningham5011 Před rokem +21

    A few times in the video the chain split-link is visible and you have the split pin(the springy bit) on backwards, this would encourage it to release and fly away when the chain rubs against something. Love the engineering behind this project, keep up the good work :-) If you're ever over in Ireland we could do with some ideas on how to finish our trike project with a 110Hp 2.0Hdi automatic fitted :-D

  • @krotson6767
    @krotson6767 Před rokem +130

    The drone motor would be useful to arm yourself with an additional heat sink. In its natural working environment, the rotor blade cools the entire engine. Thanks to this, it has a lot of power all the time, and not only when someone is not using it intensively. A simple solution would be to use a planetary gear instead of this type of gear ratio. And when it comes to the speed test, you would have to count the motor pull of the electric bike to calculate the gear ratio for the drone motor. Then the fight would be fair. It also seems to me that apart from the mechanical damage to the coils of the drone's motors, the neodymium magnets were also demagnetized. Neodymium magnets do not like high temperatures, so the bike's power could have been lower for that too. But I am not a specialist in demagnetizing neodymium magnets. I would fix what needs to be done and make another movie about it. Regards.

    • @jakegarrett8109
      @jakegarrett8109 Před rokem +8

      Often you'll see very little loss until complete destruction, once it gets that bad you'll instantly notice it. Source, I burn a LOT of motors both for fun and professionally (and yes I measure the efficiency decrease after abuse). There is a small amount of drop, but its pretty negligible for most applications.

    • @felixiaccarino8399
      @felixiaccarino8399 Před rokem +2

      i always wonder if i could do a 5km/h vehicule with tiny motors and lots of torq, and few motor baterys.
      can be?

    • @krotson6767
      @krotson6767 Před rokem

      @@felixiaccarino8399 Yes, and it's best to use a planetary gear.

    • @felixiaccarino8399
      @felixiaccarino8399 Před rokem +2

      @@krotson6767 any other advice other than the planetary?
      im from an overexploited country so resources are limited here

    • @krotson6767
      @krotson6767 Před rokem

      @@felixiaccarino8399 Ordinary belt transmission should also work. The planetary gear can be found in the screwdriver in the garbage can. If the screwdriver motor, not the gear, has burned before. What oppressed country are you from?

  • @DianneStudio
    @DianneStudio Před 3 měsíci

    amazing video .. wish to see to put a fan for the motor can change how much hot it can reduse.cheers

  • @Intervaloverdose
    @Intervaloverdose Před rokem

    Awesome and intriguing! I wonder what two or more would be like...

  • @Skyentific
    @Skyentific Před rokem +5

    Drone motor has PEAK power 1kW, and E-bike motor has RATED power 1kW.

    • @TomStantonEngineering
      @TomStantonEngineering  Před rokem +1

      True, but the drone motor is rated to 1kw for 180 seconds, which I thought would give the ebike a decent competition considering it only takes a few seconds to get up to speed. Riding up a hill continuously would be another story haha

  • @DavidBrown-wh3nk
    @DavidBrown-wh3nk Před rokem +20

    Really like this one. Those tiny motor power ratings always had me wondering "what if?" Very cool to see

    • @jimmysyar889
      @jimmysyar889 Před rokem +2

      Same. Always wanted to see someone do this. It should in theory be just as good

    • @spammy3164
      @spammy3164 Před rokem

      @@jimmysyar889 although with the extra gearing you do introduce lots of friction and power loss so would always be less

  • @rtyzxc
    @rtyzxc Před měsícem

    So much power from so small motor makes me imagine what kind of drag racer you could build with dozens of them. With more high current LiPos in series as well.

  • @Bob-ts2tu
    @Bob-ts2tu Před rokem

    reminds me of those programs that say 'we do this stuff so you dont have to'. keep it up GL

  • @Exyvia
    @Exyvia Před rokem +41

    Love this, definitely plausible to make this work, stacking 2 motors with decent cooling would make a compact solution.

    • @mikemackenziegrieve
      @mikemackenziegrieve Před rokem +1

      I gotta say I'm curious how well 2 motors would fair heat wise too.

    • @natandirt
      @natandirt Před rokem

      or like 50 of em, would be the same size as normal ebike motor lol

  • @RSpudieD
    @RSpudieD Před rokem +43

    Nice! That's impressive considering the size of the motor. I like the look of the belts and gears, too!

  • @davefool6815
    @davefool6815 Před rokem +1

    4:06 the sound of a mad professor

  • @PAballoonists
    @PAballoonists Před 9 měsíci

    You need a fan built into your belt sprocket on the motor. When you're using it in a drone you are counting on the propeller to help cool the motor. On the e-bike you are taking off at low speed with a lot of current so you need to get rid of that heat. Think of a vacuum cleaner motor, it wouldn't live long without the aid of the fan pushing air through it. These motors are generally in the 800 to 1200-watt range also

  • @phizc
    @phizc Před rokem +18

    Also, the first drone motor coat around 25 USD, while the hub motor is probably more like 150-200 USD. Would be interesting to see how good it could get if money is wisely spent maximizing perf and cooling with an equal budget 🤔. DIY or BUY? 😃

    • @JWQweqOPDH
      @JWQweqOPDH Před rokem +3

      Ignoring special discounts/deals, the hub is superior because of the combination of less battery use (due to less heat and noise energy waste), higher mud tolerance, and not needed replaced often.
      The people who make the hubs could just as easily make smaller motors like the one on the video, but choose not to.

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 Před rokem +1

      the only drawback for a hub motor is the increase in weight. but even a mid drive system has a significant weight penalty by adding chains, gears, and attachment hardware.

    • @cinemoriahFPV
      @cinemoriahFPV Před rokem

      Those motors are $14

  • @macinatire3769
    @macinatire3769 Před rokem +20

    I already know that he's gonna somehow get this to work

  • @weareallbeingwatched4602
    @weareallbeingwatched4602 Před 9 měsíci

    You could likely gang a quad of drone motors together to stack the power, and put the whole thing in a sun gear assembly.

  • @nazgullinux6601
    @nazgullinux6601 Před 9 měsíci

    Made a tensioner pulley for the belt but couldn't be bothered to use that CNC router for a chain tensioner sprocket. Very forward thinking.

  • @theleader4532
    @theleader4532 Před rokem +3

    7:18 it sounds like a mosquito 😁

  • @michielshub
    @michielshub Před rokem +17

    Nice video and it also shows how complex these mid-mounted e-bike drive trains must be to handle all that torque, peddling, free weeling, etc.

  • @crazy9cube3d
    @crazy9cube3d Před rokem

    Cool Projekt, nice to see what a Tiny Motor can do

  • @r.b.l.5841
    @r.b.l.5841 Před rokem

    Love the sound of that motor - cool.
    did some playing with home made e-bikes (four of them now!) and the most interesting option I used a rear wheel on the front and back of the bike and drive both (All wheel Drive Bike!) I let off the throttle at 75km/hr Got too scared. LOL lots of fun.

  • @Vic64Y
    @Vic64Y Před rokem +47

    What's impressive it's the fact that, yes, such micro motor... It works! And, we have to keep in mind that such tiny drone motors are designed to be cooled with a continuous flow of air coming from the propeller.

    • @nikostalk5730
      @nikostalk5730 Před rokem

      the gears did work, not a motor

    • @Descalibrado_
      @Descalibrado_ Před rokem

      does the heat comes from the amps that passes through the coils? or they heat up from the spinning alone?

    • @Vic64Y
      @Vic64Y Před rokem +1

      @@Descalibrado_ From Quora: In general, DC motors tend to get hot when they’re under a heavy load and drawing a lot of current. The more amperage is flowing through a wire, the more waste heat will come off of it, and this applies just as well to the coils inside a motor.

    • @Descalibrado_
      @Descalibrado_ Před rokem +1

      @@Vic64Y so the heat is from the electrical resistance of the high current In thin wires, thank you a lot!

    • @akiramiller9025
      @akiramiller9025 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@Vic64Y brushless motors are ac but controlled by pulsed dc

  • @ColinTimmins
    @ColinTimmins Před rokem +13

    Honestly that was a really cool experiment. I wonder how far a person can go with the idea of specifically making a small lightweight motor for making an E bike from any bike. Fun stuff. =]

  • @luxcardell8822
    @luxcardell8822 Před 9 měsíci

    All you need is a good cooling system for the motor and it's perfect XD

  • @D0li0
    @D0li0 Před 10 měsíci

    That is so ridiculously wonderful!!

  • @Hippida
    @Hippida Před rokem +76

    I remember a few years back, Tour de France started to use equipment to discover electric engines, typically hidden in the pedal crankshaft.
    So, it seems possible to use a fairly tiny engine to assist.
    As for using a tiny engine to do most of the propulsion on the other hand.... yeah, it would need much more raw torque

    • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
      @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 Před rokem +7

      Considering the budget of some of the teams, and what's at stake, I presume that they could buy far more sophisticated motors, and use a planetary reduction gear box. Perhaps mount the motor in the downtube, just under the water bottle to use it to dissipate the heat.

    • @xxportalxx.
      @xxportalxx. Před rokem +4

      @@joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 I mean swap out the enamel on the windings with a higher temp polymer or ceramic and you'll already be able to push it harder longer. Next use flat ribbon conductors instead of cylindrical wires to reduce skin effect loses and winding errors (most cheaply made coils will have messy windings that actually reduce efficiency). There's probably more expensive rare earth magnet varieties that can hold a stronger magnetic field, and lighter/stronger metals like titanium to make the stator/rotor from. Higher quality bearings would probably contribute as well.

    • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
      @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 Před rokem

      @@xxportalxx. If you have a really big budget, you could have silver windings. My thoughts of placing it under the water bottle was because they use thermal imaging cameras to detect them, you could put some ice in the water to offset the heat. I'm not sure you'd want it too powerful, it would draw attention too much.

    • @xxportalxx.
      @xxportalxx. Před rokem +3

      @@joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 oooo silver windings is an excellent addition, not even that expensive really, I use silver power straps at work actually (granted at my work money is no issue lol).

    • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
      @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 Před rokem

      @@xxportalxx. Instead or round wire, could you use square wire for them, very carefully hand wound? I guess not much of an advantage over foil. Perhaps pole pieces with slots in ( like a stepper motor ) might increase the tourque, but require a very high frequency, which would be limited by the inductance of the laminations, unless it was used only like a stepper motor at low speed, and went over to use the pole pieces as one at high speed, in some stepper motor/BLT motor hybrid.

  • @TranceFur
    @TranceFur Před rokem +34

    Would be cool to try this with other RC motors. Like maybe a 4274 size Hobbywing motor that’s meant for 1/8 racing trucks. You could run up to 22V batteries, and that bike would probably fly, haha!

    • @alphaadhito
      @alphaadhito Před rokem

      Well, you can see the original Tom Stanton DIY ebikes waay back then uses that kinda RC motor haha

    • @BloodxSoulZ
      @BloodxSoulZ Před 7 měsíci

      some are even rated for 8s Lipos as i know
      edit: Ive searched and found BL motors for 1:5 RC cars that are rated for up to 12s Lipos... so 44.4V rating/50.4V fully charged. It said 5.5A consumption at idle. ~275W without resistance? 650kV which still is 33k rpm with the 12s.
      There is no rating for stall current so i dont know the max. consumption. Without gears it should have somewhere between 180 to 300N torque

  • @taylorsopko5807
    @taylorsopko5807 Před rokem

    Good example of how math, science, and theory added together doesn't always equal fact

  • @Boop__Doop
    @Boop__Doop Před 8 měsíci +1

    Now we need a drone made out of an e-bike motor

  • @NeilStainton
    @NeilStainton Před rokem +19

    Great video Tom. It would be wonderful if you would do this experiment again using a 300g outrunner with approximately 15 times lower KV. You could get rid of the gearbox increasing the efficiency for probably the same weight. I think that would actually be an improvement over the hub motor, which actually is a brushless motor built into a planetary gearbox.

    • @Eden_M
      @Eden_M Před rokem

      The hub you see in this video is a direct drive hub, gearless.

    • @boarattackboar
      @boarattackboar Před rokem

      Funny thing is, if you keep making optimizations like this you'll just end up with a standard ebike eventually

  • @artytomparis
    @artytomparis Před rokem +32

    There are some amazing things happening with the motors that are used in electric skateboards. I ride an electric pedal bike and often see people going up hill on electric skateboards at a decent speed.

    • @marsbase3729
      @marsbase3729 Před rokem +3

      We have alien technology. 😜

    • @ianmangham4570
      @ianmangham4570 Před rokem +1

      I fly up hills on my ebike and I'm 117kg, I have a 1000w rear motor and I put 55v through it at 30 Amps 👍🇬🇧 just over 1500w

    • @Eden_M
      @Eden_M Před rokem +1

      The average e-bike controller is limited to 250~500w, e-skates are in the thousands.
      Using a Vesc on my e-bike with "Field Weakening" I reached 60km/h on flat road and 40~45km/h uphill, with a standard 500w hub motor, it got the system pulling 2000W at 48v, without any overheating.

    • @ted_van_loon
      @ted_van_loon Před rokem +1

      @@marsbase3729 have you been at chicken hole base?

    • @johnwest7993
      @johnwest7993 Před rokem +2

      I almost hit a curb in my car the first time I saw an electric skateboard racing up a hill on the sidewalk beside me. It looks sooo weird.

  • @Muflinn
    @Muflinn Před rokem

    Looks like made from my favorite lego technic the best one when i was kid Very creative,gj Mate

  • @propm
    @propm Před 4 měsíci +1

    It sounds insane xD The first time I think a electrical transportation kinda sounds fun, maybe they should make EV's with a bunch of big drone engines.

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreations Před rokem +15

    Damn! That's pretty surprising indeed, Tom! 😃
    Fantastic work!!!
    Now imagine one of those big 30+ sized motors!
    Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊

    • @modelnutty6503
      @modelnutty6503 Před rokem +1

      might be fun with a loose/unused 1500kv 3650 w 5mm output shaft here.
      could be done with standard available pinion+spur gears to keep it simple.
      the size and fairly low rpm/volt might be close enough to appropriate.
      with 3S or 12v about 18k rpm free spin, calculate reduction for 16k rpm 18 mph.
      -because if you were pedaling 18 mph is pushing pretty hard!

    • @MCsCreations
      @MCsCreations Před rokem

      @@modelnutty6503 Exactly!

  • @fernbear3950
    @fernbear3950 Před rokem +8

    That's super fun! I wish I could have seen a "with pedaling" top speed as well. And a temp sensor with an auto cutoff would be nice too! I think it's really nice, too, because you can have a little boost for hills in a commute and such where you don't want to get your suit sweaty, but don't have to carry around a full battery/motor assembly at all times.

    • @bikeislife8405
      @bikeislife8405 Před rokem

      A slightly larger drone motor and I'm sure it would only be better!

  • @abidamjad3844
    @abidamjad3844 Před rokem +4

    Just here to say what a fantastic work experiment this gentleman has done. Really impressive and made us Brits very proud.
    Well done Sir clap 👏👏👏

  • @homesformeremortals5935

    Love your channel brother. Keep make cool stuff.

  • @markvermaat652
    @markvermaat652 Před rokem +4

    Great vid. This is how inventions are done. Experiments, improvements, building things. Love to see this

  • @craigcarmichael5748
    @craigcarmichael5748 Před rokem +5

    Even if all else was equal and even if the drone motors wouldn't burn out, the two sets of linkages would lose some percentage of the power, while the e-bike motor is direct drive - no transmission losses. So more power in the drag race, longer battery life. Nice builds, nice tests, nice video!

  • @AleksiJoensuu
    @AleksiJoensuu Před rokem +2

    A spring loaded chain tensioner could help you with the chain coming off. They are often used in single speed bikes.

    • @boots7859
      @boots7859 Před 8 měsíci

      Hasn't he had this issue before? I'm not even a regular bike rider anymore, been 25 years since last and I know that pretty basic requirement.

  • @johnadriani7467
    @johnadriani7467 Před 4 měsíci

    In any case, it is possible to use a motor from a model. It doesn't have to be a drone motor, but rather from a monster truck and with a flying clutch like the one used in RC cars. Depending on the springs, you can control the timing of engagement and therefore can the engine comes up to speed and thus cools itself

  • @Vok250
    @Vok250 Před rokem +14

    Eskater do this all the time. The key is to move fast enough to keep the motor air cooled, to buy reputable brands, and to use the right gear ratio. Lower KV ratings usually work better too.

  • @axedastudio
    @axedastudio Před měsícem

    I love your experiment, sir.
    😂😂😂

  • @icecreamtruckog3667
    @icecreamtruckog3667 Před 8 měsíci

    It is not just a matter of how many wats a motor can output but also the Newtons or force.

  • @llejk
    @llejk Před rokem +10

    I think it would be really cool to find some low rpm high torque motors (maybe from 1:10 RC trucks? ) and design a 2WD bicycle. I have a front driven ebike, and i love how it tracks on sandy paths like beaches or even climb when i coordinate carefully with pedaling.

    • @EagleFPV43
      @EagleFPV43 Před rokem +1

      This is what i was thinking, rc cars have motors that are larger in size and with much more torque but run on the same batteries

  • @idonthaveskill5054
    @idonthaveskill5054 Před rokem +16

    I'm no engineer or anything, but I feel like this could be used to maintain speed once you get there as opposed to starting from a dead stop. I'd assume it would put less stress on the motor that way

    • @oadka
      @oadka Před rokem +1

      Exactly! its way more economical than a ebike motor!

    • @casper2501
      @casper2501 Před rokem +1

      @@oadka I would treat this motor as little helper while im doing most of the job while moving in desired speed, this small motor is good for keeping speed, but not for starting to get moving.

    • @BrightBlueJim
      @BrightBlueJim Před rokem

      Which works until you try using it to go up a hill.

  • @berbandis
    @berbandis Před 10 měsíci

    That drone motor would usually have a prop on it that doubles as a fan for cooling it. That may be the main issue you are having plus a little friction from the added cogs.

  • @MikeZ8709
    @MikeZ8709 Před rokem +1

    SR-71 blackbird comparison was great!

  • @tessa7468
    @tessa7468 Před rokem +3

    I love this! I would love to see you take it to the next level, like making it a bit more reliable or maybe even giving it water cooling

  • @erflorida
    @erflorida Před rokem +3

    That's some great stuff you got right there. Love the engineering.