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Rivian's TM-B electric bike

(www.theverge.com)
188 points hasheddan | 6 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source | bottom
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dreamcompiler ◴[] No.45673731[source]
808Wh battery and 100 miles of range. These two numbers track with each other and are roughly believable.

OTOH, with a battery this big, a generator powered by the pedals, and regen braking this thing has to be heavy. I'd expect it to weigh at least 80 lbs. More likely 100. The fact that their "specs" say nothing about weight suggests they're embarrassed about the weight.

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jeffbee ◴[] No.45675314[source]
Regen braking is how you can tell this was designed by a moron. The energy balance simply does not favor regenerative braking on a bicycle, especially a bicycle that flippantly ignores aerodynamics like this one does. A bicyclist loses roughly all of their energy to air resistance. It's not a truck. There is not substantial potential energy to be recaptured going down hills.
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edaemon ◴[] No.45675413[source]
What do you mean? The regenerative braking only kicks in when you engage the brake lever. It's not going to add much range but it's free, I don't see any downside to including regenerative braking.
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1. jeffbee ◴[] No.45675508[source]
It isn't free. How could it be free? It requires at least an electronic control system and a pressure sensor.
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2. LoganDark ◴[] No.45675599[source]
It was already going to have some sensor for, say, the brake light.
3. 01HNNWZ0MV43FF ◴[] No.45675620[source]
Are there popular e-bikes without electronic motor control?
4. edaemon ◴[] No.45675625[source]
It's the same control system that operates the motor. The motor is just being used as a generator.

I'm not sure which pressure sensor you mean, like in the brake lever? E-bikes with hydraulic brakes already have sensors for power cutoff (and in this case for brake lights).

5. numpad0 ◴[] No.45676361[source]
3-phase motors are controlled by torque commands into the driver. Give it a value and it generates requisite voltages to fill the gap between current state and desired state. Give it a positive value and the driver spins up the motor, give it a negative and it artificially spins down the motor progressively by commanded amounts. So especially off-throttle regen is completely free. IIUC.
6. cyberax ◴[] No.45676443[source]
If you engineer it properly, it doesn't add _any_ weight or complexity. All you need is a bit different arrangement of power transistors and some software.

Why existing bikes don't use it? Because you need software or a more complicated controller, and the amount of regenerated energy is indeed not that large.