Author Topic: Front wheel or rear?  (Read 20765 times)

Offline austindenny

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Front wheel or rear?
« on: September 01, 2008, 02:45:36 AM »
I bought a used 2005 Gary Fisher Marlin yesterday on CraigsList and began disassembling it today to do a full clean/tune up.  I did not see much detailed information on the web site as far as the differences/dimensions for the two different set ups.  I'd like to keep my 9 gear sprocket and have an easier conversion for when I want to go trail riding.  I'd appreciate some advice from those who have been there and done that.  Pictures would be nice too. 

Thanks,
Austin

Offline biohazardman

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #1 on: September 01, 2008, 03:29:32 AM »
I took my bike on the trail, rear motor and batts, today and it did good but I did keep the speed down on the downhill with no trail and took a more gradual hill on a dirt road back up so I did not have to exert myself to much. For the stealth look and I believe for strength the rear is best but that means finding a place for the batteries.  Most put them on racks on the rear and things can get a bit unstable at very low speeds or on mounting or diss-mounting the bike.  The batteries need to be installed in the triangle to get better balance and lower is better.  Front installs are easy to balance better as putting them in bags slung low on a rear rack is about all you need to do.  You loose traction with the front mounted motors on steep uphill grades from what I have read and one can break the dropouts.  It's tuff to make these bikes light mine is 60lbs.   Making the bike lighter means less battery and possibly a geared motor I have seen a couple of nice ones but not for the trails.  Building a full suspension, with a 10 lb geared motor, now and agonizing over battery placement once again my self. As with most things there are trade offs so build a few and keep the one you like best?  ;^)  GM shows their motors installed both ways. 

http://www.goldenmotor.com/

Endless Sphere has lots of info and pics.

http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewforum.php?f=6

« Last Edit: September 01, 2008, 03:42:10 AM by biohazardman »

Offline biohazardman

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #2 on: September 04, 2008, 12:02:16 AM »
OOPS did I ferget to say no 9 speed on a rear wheel and if it's a GM then only a 5 will werq.  You can manage a 7 on a bmc geared rear but they costs much more. So if you want the gears it needs be a front wheel drive. Motors are near the same size front or rear.  Specs are on the Golden motor site.

Offline Oscillator

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #3 on: May 09, 2010, 07:13:11 PM »
Interesting old post....

Why is nobody using front wheel mount? Is it that bad?

80% of bike braking is done by front brake so it would be logical to mount it on front (no matter the less traction due to weight distribution).

And yes I wanted to ask. I have bike that I like going offroad jumping and doing a little agressive riding, but I wanna be able to use it as eBike also for longer trips
So thats why I wanna make it front wheel mount.
How fast/easy you can dissasamble the whole thing if you wanna quickly convert it into "normal" bike?
I have extra wheel ready for swich, so how fast can I remove the Front wheel (motor) and battery if I decide to buy MagicPie motor?

thank you

Offline Leslie

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #4 on: May 09, 2010, 11:49:58 PM »
I took my bike on the trail, rear motor and batts, today and it did good but I did keep the speed down on the downhill with no trail and took a more gradual hill on a dirt road back up so I did not have to exert myself to much. For the stealth look and I believe for strength the rear is best but that means finding a place for the batteries.  Most put them on racks on the rear and things can get a bit unstable at very low speeds or on mounting or diss-mounting the bike.  The batteries need to be installed in the triangle to get better balance and lower is better.  Front installs are easy to balance better as putting them in bags slung low on a rear rack is about all you need to do.




Hi Bioman..  8)

Haven't seen you here for some time.

Pacing batteries in the triangle is the best way with rear motors.  Lowish is good, too low creates a lower centre of gravity impeding the riders ability to rebalance out of turns.  Simply said she turns into a slug to lean.

Strange enough if the pack is heavy, placing it lower, lowers the centre of gravity making the bike top heavy to control.  Rider weight becomes less effective to the balance in and out of turns, making the rider have to work harder to lean.



Balance of a bike is not all as it seems..  The riders ability to shift his or her weight makes a very large difference to the way things work.  A battery is dead weight.

The way a bike stays vetrtical is like magic isnt it?
« Last Edit: May 10, 2010, 07:44:31 AM by 317537 »

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Offline Oscillator

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #5 on: June 14, 2010, 12:42:38 PM »
It seems I didn't found answer to my question below... still... I have another :)

What is the main difference between MagicPie front and read? Dimensions? Something else?
Can I put my front mount Magic Pie on my rear wheel?
Thank you

Offline e-lmer

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #6 on: June 15, 2010, 03:52:47 AM »
The front wheel Magic Pie motor is physically
similar to the rear one.

The difference is that the rear Magic Pie comes
with
requires a thread-on freewheel gear cluster.

The difference in the bike requirements is major
however.

If you are using a front wheel Pie, then you must
have steel forks on the bike.  I tried with an aluminum
fork and my wheel ripped the drop-outs right out
of the fork.

I have replaced the fork with a chrome-moly fork
and added a torque arm to the shaft and am very
happy with it.

The front wheel does feel more balanced to me
since the batteries on the rack weight about the
same as the motor on the front.

The rear wheel is a little more difficult to get set
up properly, but the rear drop-outs for the axle
are a little more forgiving of the material.

This is just my opinion.
« Last Edit: June 01, 2012, 12:02:29 PM by Bikemad »

Offline Bikemad

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Re: Differences in front and rear wheels
« Reply #7 on: June 16, 2010, 01:46:44 AM »
The difference is that the rear Magic Pie comes
with a freewheel gear cluster.

They come with a threaded boss to accept a screw on freewheel, but the freewheel unit itself was only supplied if specified and paid for as an additional option to the standard kit.
As far as I'm aware, they still don't come with a freewheel as standard, unless GM have changed the kit specifications. ;)

The rear wheel has a different right hand side cover and a much longer axle to allow for the additional width of the freewheel:

   
           Front Wheel                            Rear Wheel


Alan


« Last Edit: June 30, 2017, 07:27:57 PM by Bikemad »

Offline e-lmer

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #8 on: June 23, 2010, 12:41:36 AM »
Sorry, I was shooting from the hip, I knew that the
wheel didn't come with the freewheel, but that the axle
was a different length to accommodate it and that the cover
was different (threaded).

I was trying to indicate that there were not any
internal differences. 

I will be more careful, since I am being watched.
:)


Offline dyent

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #9 on: July 16, 2010, 06:09:34 PM »
The front wheel Magic Pie motor is physically
similar to the rear one.

The difference is that the rear Magic Pie comes
with a freewheel gear cluster.

The difference in the bike requirements is major
however.

If you are using a front wheel pie, then you must
have steel forks on the bike.  I tried with an aluminum
fork and my wheel ripped the drop-outs right out
of the fork.

I have replaced the fork with a chrome-moly fork
and added a torque arm to the shaft and am very
happy with it.

The front wheel does feel more balanced to me
since the batteries on the rack weight about the
same as the motor on the front.

The rear wheel is a little more difficult to get set
up properly, but the rear drop-outs for the axle
are a little more forgiving of the material.

This is just my opinion.

When your front hub tore out of your drop out, where you using a torque arm at the time?  I am looking to install this same set up using my aluminum front suspension forks, but with torque arm, so just wondering if this would be OK?

Also, anyone out there having tried both the 36V 500W motor and the 36V 250W mini geared motor?  I would like a real life comparison between the both in terms of how they climb up hills?  Such as, how much more/less effort is required to pedal up hills etc.........

I currently am using 36V 500W rear hub (direct drive/gearless), but as mentioned in earlier topic, with battery pack on rear rack, front end is becomes way too light when trail climbing..........options would be too custom mount battery pack inside triangular frame to lower centre of gravity and/or goto a front hub motor for better balance........I know that there is a trade off either way, but if someone can get me some sort of input between the 2 motors would be much appreciated!  Thanks, David

Offline e-lmer

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #10 on: July 16, 2010, 10:48:00 PM »

It was not a very long torque plate,
but the problem is that most aluminum
forks don't have flat drop-outs, but instead use
shaped dropouts for quick-release.

I did not even ride it, I just goosed the motor
with the wheel off the ground and ripped out
the drop-outs.

It cost me a bit, but I replaced the fork
with a suspension steel fork. ($300USD on
a $200USD Bike.)

I am very happy with it tho.


The whole shebang doesn't sit flat then.

Offline Leslie

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #11 on: July 16, 2010, 11:03:42 PM »
.

The front wheel does feel more balanced to me
since the batteries on the rack weight about the
same as the motor on the front.

I like the rear motor better.  I guess its just a silly preference thing.  But I was wondering whether or not that the battery in the back with the front wheel makes the balance so much better that considering the front hub over the rear is the better choice.


Some of my rides are very loaded at times and I  would always  get concerned about dragging lots of weight using the forks.  I am willing to get a full suspension steel bike that I can put a pack in the triangle but these frames vary so much and getting something in the frame triangle could be a waste of time.

Anything you could point me towards would help.



I was looking at this job at Kmart. The frame is a little on the light side but I am sure it is steel.  It has both front and rear disc brakes so going for a 20" cast rear wheel is an exciting option.
« Last Edit: July 16, 2010, 11:06:14 PM by 317537 »

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Offline GM Canada

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #12 on: July 17, 2010, 02:50:35 AM »
Hi Leslie

I'm sure you already realize, but a simple test to see if the frame is steel is to take a magnet with you on your nest visit to Kmart. ( They have Kmart is Australia too?)

Gary

Offline Leslie

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #13 on: July 17, 2010, 04:30:55 AM »
Hi Leslie

I'm sure you already realize, but a simple test to see if the frame is steel is to take a magnet with you on your nest visit to Kmart. ( They have Kmart is Australia too?)

Gary


Yes we have Kmart in OZ.

We get these Currie tech E-bikes sometimes for as little as $130.  Includes batts charger and motor.  A whole E-bike.

No I didnt know to take a magnet with me,  :'( but I did know about Iron (steel) being magnetic and aluminum not. .

I used to tap them with something.  Aluminum sounds different.  But the magnet Idea is grouse and more reliable.  Thanks for the suggestion.

:D
« Last Edit: July 17, 2010, 04:33:56 AM by 317537 »

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Offline Leslie

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Re: Front wheel or rear?
« Reply #14 on: July 17, 2010, 04:41:57 AM »
Here is a side view of the green machine I am contemplating building, Its hard to see the rear disc brakes in both pics.



I was thinking I could squeeze a GM pack into the triangle on the bottom bar under the rear shock there.  Not much room in there though.
 
Any thoughts Gary?  
« Last Edit: July 17, 2010, 04:48:19 AM by 317537 »

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