The Copenhagen Wheel turns Bicycle into an Electric Bike


       An electric hub-motor plug-in for our smartphones known as the Copenhagen Wheel is finally here.The device is a swap-in style package that replaces your standard issue bike wheel with 350 watts of hill-busting, regenerative power-harvesting awesomeness. Not since the invention of the electric toothbrush has there been such smooth integration of manual and machine power available to us. The beauty of the design is that all the hardware motor, control, and batteries are squeezed that still manages to fit between the back forks of a traditional bike. Once you plug the enhanced bike into your phone it becomes your new bionic best friend, intuitively sensing how fast you want to go from the effort applied to your pedals much like the Segway responds to your lean.

        Flat motor designs (actually called pancake motors) have been around for a while, but have never been all that great as far as performance. Precision control of three-phase DC brushless motors, as exquisitely used in the Copenhagen Wheel, has now been perfected to such an art form that near-impossible wizardry Tesla himself could have barely imagined is now available for everything from simple computer fans to electric tanks.

                                                            Technology specs:

 Motor: 350W, EU: 250W
Size: 26 inches or 700c rim
Battery: 48V lithium
Connectivity: Bluetooth 4.0
Range: Up to 31 miles (50 km)
Battery life: 1000 cycles
Charge time: 4 hours
Smartphone OS: iOS, Android
Compatibility: Single speed or 7/8/9/10 speed-free hub
Top speed US: 20 mph, EU: 25 km/h
Brake type: Rim brake and regenerative braking (downhill and back pedal)
Weight: 13 pounds (5.9 kg)
Dropout: 120mm (single speed, 135mm (single and multi-speed)


     
  From the technical specifications above, we can see that while the Copenhagen Wheel is no beast, it does have an impressive array of features. Not least among them is a forthcoming SDK that hopefully will allow some customization. Once hackers can put a slave wheel on the front forks so that total power is more in the single horsepower range, then who knows, maybe even Americans will buy a few. Instead of the tandem concept, mount the two wheels in parallel, then suddenly a ZRT (zero radius turn) wheelchair design becomes interesting. With a little more imagination, spin a re-geared hub 90 degrees and stick a small prop on the end, and human-powered flight designs may get a much needed enhancement.

        The main hurdle to widespread adoption of this kind of device is probably not technical, but rather legal. Every jurisdiction likely has its own interpretation of what constitutes license-worthy motive power. At a price point of less than $1000, many will hopefully be ready to find out for themselves what the Copenhagen Wheel will make possible.
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