Leslie, I think you are crazier than I LOL. why don't you just go and buy a pie? 90 volts? why don't you convert an old motorbike? I would be too scared to go so fast. That would give you over 40 mph? Is that not too much stress for a motor like that?
I think it might be easier for me to install a large heatsink on my battery box. Just remove the board from the case and mount the board to the heatsink and put some kind of cover over it.
By the way leslie, how did you manage to cook that motor?
I would be very interested to know how much power the pie could take. It never gets hot, only slightly warm.
Well if you reduce the current to the motor the winding can induce torque from the voltage, the coils are an inductor by nature. I will never get the 20 amps of torque at that voltage but if I was to rewind the dead motor with a longer wire with more turns over each former (coil core) I will get plenty of torque and it may slow the motor down a bit. I wont get much more than 1400 watts out of it.
So 1400W/90v = 15 amps. 15 amps is what I will limit it to via a shunt. With more winding and less current, the motor will be slower than a normal HBS hub at 90v but I may get 65+kph out of her on the flats. And a lighter lithium pack will take a lot of the load off the motor. THE AH will be better and more efficient.
Its like a low RPM high torque 220v motor. It has longer thinner windings and winds out the voltage and converts it to Magnetic density and not so much magnetic intensity.
Magnetic density = amps = torque
Magnetic intensity = volts = speed.
These two can be interchangeable by way of how you wind the coils..
How the motor gots melted.
So!
Who killed the electric bike.
The Wife.
My wife loves to shop.
And note the 28kgs of SLA's strapped to the frame.
This was a 36v 750 watt HBS running at 48v 1000 watts.
The motor survived the above abuse OK, it was the next weeks or the week after shop that killed the electric bike. LOL I would of done the same as we thought there was nothing going to stop this baby.
Poo it stunk and I had to hose it down it was so freaking hot.
It ran for a few days and the hall sensor blew out, so when I repaired I saw the melting and thought it wise to not use this motor anymore and try to rewind it.
honestly I would not attempt to push more current through the Pie. You may find the current will pick up when you put more volts in and you may gain a little more torque but then again I do think you should enjoy your bike as it is and do stuff when a repair is needed..
This way if you mod when your bike is defunct you are not risking a working bike to try out for more performance.