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Electric bicycles : a guide to design and use / William C. Morchin and Henry Oman.

By: Morchin, William C, 1936-.
Contributor(s): Oman, Henry, 1918- | IEEE Xplore (Online Service) [distributor.] | Wiley-Interscience [publisher.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: IEEE press series on electronics technology: 8Publisher: Hoboken, New Jersey : Wiley, 2006Distributor: [Piscataqay, New Jersey] : IEEE Xplore, [2006]Description: 1 PDF (xiii, 190 pages) : illustrations.Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780471746218.Uniform titles: IEEE Xplore (Livres) Subject(s): Electric bicycles | Electric bicycles -- Design and construction | Acceleration | Batteries | Bicycles | Cities and towns | Coils | Commutation | Current measurement | DC motors | Discharges | Drag | Electric vehicles | Electrical resistance measurement | Fluids | Foot | Force | Force measurement | Gears | Immune system | Indexes | Induction motors | Kelvin | Lead | Lithium | Magnetic flux | Maintenance engineering | Patents | Permanent magnet motors | Petroleum | Power generation | Power measurement | Production | Propulsion | Reluctance motors | Resistance | Roads | Shape | Synchronous motors | System analysis and design | Tires | Torque | Traffic control | WheelsGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleOnline resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
Preface -- 1 Electric Bicycles - History, Characteristics, and Uses -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 History of Bicycles -- 1.3 History of Electric Bicycles -- 1.4 Some Uses for the Electric-Powered Bicycle -- 1.5 Examples of Electric Bicycles -- 1.6 Future of Electric Bicycles -- 1.7 Laws and Regulations Governing Electric Bicycles -- 1.8 Conclusion -- 2 Fundamentals of Electric Propulsion -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Mathematical Model of Bicycle Performance: Power Required -- 2.3 Estimating Required Motor Power -- 2.4 Selecting a Battery for Minimum Life-Cycle Cost -- 2.5 Unique New Two-Wheeled Vehicles -- 3 Sources of Electric Power for Bicycles -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Requirements of Batteries for Powering Electric Bicycles -- 3.3 Characteristics of batteries Suitable for Electric Bicycle Propulsion -- 3.4 Fuel Cells for Powering Electric Bicycles -- 3.5 Best New Electric Power Sources -- 3.6 Bicycle Propulsion Power Sources to Watch -- 4 Battery Charging -- 4.1 History of battery-Charging Technology -- 4.2 Basic Functions of battery Chargers -- 4.3 Battery Characteristics Pertinent in Charging -- 4.4 Lead-Acid Battery Charging -- 4.5 Charger Design for Long Battery Life -- 4.6 Smart Chargers for New Nickel-Cadmium and Nickel-Metal Hydride, and Lithium Batteries -- 4.7 Smart Batteries for Smart Chargers -- 4.8 Self-Discharge Rate of Nickel and Lithium Cells -- 4.9 Recoverable Energy -- 4.10 Solar Panel Battery Chargers -- 5 Motors and Motor Controllers -- 5.1 Fundamental Principles of Electric Motors -- 5.2 Motor Characteristics for Electric Bicycle Propulsion -- 5.3 Gear Ratio Determination -- 5.4 Motor Control -- 6 The System Design -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Setting up the Electric Bicycle Systems Design -- 6.3 Some Examples of Bicycle-System Trade -- 6.4 System Design Example -- 7 Measurement of Performance -- 7.1 Measuring Propulsion Power to determine Propulsion Efficiency -- 7.2 Measuring Motor Efficiency Includes Measurement of Motor Power -- 7.3 Measuring battery Characteristics.
8 Developments to Watch -- 8.1 Bicycle Systems -- 8.2 Energy Sources -- 8.3 Solar Charging Systems -- 8.4 High-Efficiency Motors -- 8.5 Controllers -- Appendix: Table of Conversion Factors for Units of Measure -- Index.
Summary: Design or build a battery-powered electric bicycle For much of the world, bicycles are a transportation mainstay. Electric bicycles--powered by a rechargeable battery pack--are proven to deliver the highest possible energy efficiency, even compared to pedal bikes. A transportation alternative to fossil fuels, electric bicycles are fast catching on, in part because they don't require factory assembly. End-users can easily construct them with available components.The text reveals important techniques, data, and examples that allow readers to judge various propulsion setups--used in both home- and factory-made bikes--and estimate speed and travel distance for each. Numerous charts clearly present the costs, benefits, and trade-offs between both commercial and user-converted models.Key features include:. Estimating motor-performance for wind, hill, and cruising power requirements. Estimating battery capacity and a thorough description of battery charging. Motor and motor-control options. Evaluating motor-to-wheel coupling options. Placement of propulsion components. Configurations and performance. How systems-engineering techniques can produce electric-bicycle designs that have long travel range and low life-cycle cost. Testing. Developments to watchA comprehensive resource for harnessing innovation, Electric Bicycles is the definitive practical guide to taking full advantage of this exciting alternative energy technology.
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Preface -- 1 Electric Bicycles - History, Characteristics, and Uses -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 History of Bicycles -- 1.3 History of Electric Bicycles -- 1.4 Some Uses for the Electric-Powered Bicycle -- 1.5 Examples of Electric Bicycles -- 1.6 Future of Electric Bicycles -- 1.7 Laws and Regulations Governing Electric Bicycles -- 1.8 Conclusion -- 2 Fundamentals of Electric Propulsion -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Mathematical Model of Bicycle Performance: Power Required -- 2.3 Estimating Required Motor Power -- 2.4 Selecting a Battery for Minimum Life-Cycle Cost -- 2.5 Unique New Two-Wheeled Vehicles -- 3 Sources of Electric Power for Bicycles -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Requirements of Batteries for Powering Electric Bicycles -- 3.3 Characteristics of batteries Suitable for Electric Bicycle Propulsion -- 3.4 Fuel Cells for Powering Electric Bicycles -- 3.5 Best New Electric Power Sources -- 3.6 Bicycle Propulsion Power Sources to Watch -- 4 Battery Charging -- 4.1 History of battery-Charging Technology -- 4.2 Basic Functions of battery Chargers -- 4.3 Battery Characteristics Pertinent in Charging -- 4.4 Lead-Acid Battery Charging -- 4.5 Charger Design for Long Battery Life -- 4.6 Smart Chargers for New Nickel-Cadmium and Nickel-Metal Hydride, and Lithium Batteries -- 4.7 Smart Batteries for Smart Chargers -- 4.8 Self-Discharge Rate of Nickel and Lithium Cells -- 4.9 Recoverable Energy -- 4.10 Solar Panel Battery Chargers -- 5 Motors and Motor Controllers -- 5.1 Fundamental Principles of Electric Motors -- 5.2 Motor Characteristics for Electric Bicycle Propulsion -- 5.3 Gear Ratio Determination -- 5.4 Motor Control -- 6 The System Design -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Setting up the Electric Bicycle Systems Design -- 6.3 Some Examples of Bicycle-System Trade -- 6.4 System Design Example -- 7 Measurement of Performance -- 7.1 Measuring Propulsion Power to determine Propulsion Efficiency -- 7.2 Measuring Motor Efficiency Includes Measurement of Motor Power -- 7.3 Measuring battery Characteristics.

8 Developments to Watch -- 8.1 Bicycle Systems -- 8.2 Energy Sources -- 8.3 Solar Charging Systems -- 8.4 High-Efficiency Motors -- 8.5 Controllers -- Appendix: Table of Conversion Factors for Units of Measure -- Index.

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Design or build a battery-powered electric bicycle For much of the world, bicycles are a transportation mainstay. Electric bicycles--powered by a rechargeable battery pack--are proven to deliver the highest possible energy efficiency, even compared to pedal bikes. A transportation alternative to fossil fuels, electric bicycles are fast catching on, in part because they don't require factory assembly. End-users can easily construct them with available components.The text reveals important techniques, data, and examples that allow readers to judge various propulsion setups--used in both home- and factory-made bikes--and estimate speed and travel distance for each. Numerous charts clearly present the costs, benefits, and trade-offs between both commercial and user-converted models.Key features include:. Estimating motor-performance for wind, hill, and cruising power requirements. Estimating battery capacity and a thorough description of battery charging. Motor and motor-control options. Evaluating motor-to-wheel coupling options. Placement of propulsion components. Configurations and performance. How systems-engineering techniques can produce electric-bicycle designs that have long travel range and low life-cycle cost. Testing. Developments to watchA comprehensive resource for harnessing innovation, Electric Bicycles is the definitive practical guide to taking full advantage of this exciting alternative energy technology.

Also available in print.

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Description based on PDF viewed 12/21/2015.

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