Theoritcal CC Motor Gearing Questions -
09.29.2010, 03:11 PM
Alright. Lets talk motors and gearing.
For all examples, the battery is 4S 30C 5000mah.
Vehicle weighs ~14lbs.
Stock motor and esc is a CC MMM 2200kv combo.
Stock gearing hits 40mph with a 20t pinion.
If one were to purchase a 1518, 1520, or 1717 motor, what would happen if the vehicle were geared to still hit its 40mph top speed while using the same battery?
Table: Motor and Pinion required to hit stock 40mph top speed.
1515 1Y 2200kv motor 20T pinion
1518 1Y 1800kv motor ~25T pinion
1520 1Y 1600kv motor ~28T pinion
1717 1580kv motor ~28T pinion
The three choices all have significantly more torque than the 1515, but will they be able to over come the added strain.
I saw Bondo recently say the 1717 is an amp hog. Given that I would say the 1520 would be the most efficient. Longer motors generally run cooler geared for the same speed.
Well, bigger pinion on bigger motor means nothing in terms of "extra gearing".
The longer motor produce more torque for the same current, so geared for the same speed the current will be theoritically the same.
In the reality, the current will be a little smaller in the longer motor, as it's run more efficient (less magnetic losses as it spins slower, less heat as it handle the same power in a longer can...).
But this is true if the widings are the same, which the case between all of thoses motors (1 turn star widings).
So don't be worry using bigger pinions on longer motor ;)
Inferno VE MMv3 NEU-CC 1515/1Y 4S "Flying machine"
If one were to purchase a 1518, 1520, or 1717 motor, what would happen if the vehicle were geared to still hit its 40mph top speed while using the same battery?
Table: Motor and Pinion required to hit stock 40mph top speed.
1515 1Y 2200kv motor 20T pinion
1518 1Y 1800kv motor ~25T pinion
1520 1Y 1600kv motor ~28T pinion
1717 1580kv motor ~28T pinion
The three choices all have significantly more torque than the 1515, but will they be able to over come the added strain.
Will they pull more amps to do so?
Will they over heat?
Thanks
Hello
I didn't want to start a new thread in the same subject. I am wondering about the same question, but not from the theoretical point of view:
Did someone actually try the 1717 or the 1518 geared up for about 40MPH with 4S 5000 mph (or so) Lipo in his truggy ? any conclusions? (amp draw, run time, temperatures ?)
Thanks
Billy
I try a 1520 on 4S in my buggy instead of a 1515 on 4S. I have lower temps and a little more run time, which is logical, the longer motor provides better efficiency (same windings and design).
The 1515 was about 42°C at run end, and 1520 was about 34°C...
Inferno VE MMv3 NEU-CC 1515/1Y 4S "Flying machine"
I try a 1520 on 4S in my buggy instead of a 1515 on 4S. I have lower temps and a little more run time, which is logical, the longer motor provides better efficiency (same windings and design).
The 1515 was about 42°C at run end, and 1520 was about 34°C...
Thank you very much. That is the exact kind of info I wanted to hear. Maybe I won't have to run 5s in my truggy. Only needs to hit 40mph for racing. I planed on running the 1518 in it, but I may trying out my 1520 also.
I Will try my 1717 when it comes. I am very curious to see what will be the temps, the amps draw and run time if geared to hit 40 mph (about 19/46) with my 4S Lipos on the rc8t-e. I anyone here have any news to me also - I would like to hear
Yes, but if you gear more in an heavy vehicle, that's the ESC which will suffer a little more. The danger is that your motor temps will be colder than the 1515, so you will want to gear it up a lot...
Anyway, nothing replace the test, with checking the motor and ESC temps every minutes the first run
Inferno VE MMv3 NEU-CC 1515/1Y 4S "Flying machine"