Greetings all!
I am building an electric cyclekart imitation of a 1935 Morgan F2 three wheeler. Basically an historically themed, small scale, big wheeled go kart. Here's my build thread if you're interested in more details:
https://www.cyclekartclub.com/forum/custom-karts-forum.6/morgan-f2-threewheeler-electric-cyclecar.37863/I've been reading and lurking on DIY EV sites while building, but I'm very near the point where I need to pull the trigger and order motor, controller, and battery and would appreciate advice.
Desired max speed on level ground:
35mph
Desired max range at what cruising speed.
15 miles at 25mph (with hills involved)
Preferred bike wheel size, or wheel size of bike you want to convert. Most common kits are for 26" wheels.
Rear drive wheel is 12" pitbike rim (overall diameter with street tire probably 8" greater)
Brake type of motor wheel. Disc or not.
Disk
Rider weight.
220 lbs rider + 30 lbs dog + ~250 lb chassis (guessing on chassis, trying to keep it light)
Terrain.
Hilly (hill country outside Austin TX)
Budget.
~$2000 for drivetrain: motor + controller + batteries + wires + throttle/switches
As you can see above, I don't have any great need for speed and likely it would scare the poop out of me to go over 30mph in my deathtrap. But I'll need enough power to go uphill, and want to be able to go faster than most golf carts. It's a NEV, not highway machine.
I'm started by looking at the 3 and 5 kw kits from Goldenmotor. The 3kw model is certainly easy on the budget, however I have concerns that it would not provide satisfactory power. The 5kw kit would seem to give enough power.... if I can supply the current.
For the battery, hopefully the above would help inform those more experienced than I determine sizing. I don't want to build my own from individual cells big-AA sized cells for my first foray into DIY EV (no spot welder for one), but understandably there aren't really a lot of prebuilt turnkey packs out there either... but GM has some. I am strongly considering the Goldenmotor LFP-4830M, but I don't know if its max continuous discharge rate of 60A would be overly limiting. The motor and controller can handle a lot more it seems, so I would think being limited to 60A continuous might be a problem.... or might mean I wont stress the motor/controller combo and it'll last a lot better. Any advice? Suggestions for Li batteries for my application?
Thanks for reading (assuming you got here, sorry I'm long winded)!
Paul