"John Doe" wrote in message
If you hard-start the motor, don't forget to add the following
line to the user manual:
"Grab ankles before operating switch."
Maybe I should not have asked the second question. All I really
need to know is whether a simple on-off switch will do. At the
moment, I am going with a controller.
FWIW...
It is going to be a stick held by hand, sort of like a stick they
use for very small boats in shallow water. The pressure against
the ground is readily controlled. There does not have to be
massive pressure against the motor on startup, especially not if I
get up to speed (in low gear, only somewhere around 6 mph) before
putting the wheel on the ground.
I might use a cuff against my left back thigh. That cuff will
stick out from the stick at thigh level (of course). In
experimentation with an earlier (way too heavy) more powerful
model, it was stable enough with the pushing force at thigh level
or even lower. Using a thigh cuff will allow effortlessly pushing
the wheel into the ground, without a lot of static weight on the
wheel. As the wheel gets closer to my center of balance, the stick
angle becomes steeper and the wheel is pushed into the ground by
the counterforce of my thigh.
I plan to put the battery on the top end of the stick, as a
counterbalance when carrying the thing. That is partly due to lack
of freewheeling. But carrying the push stick instead of rolling it
along behind when not in use might be advantageous, if it is light
enough. Going up curbs with the 30+ pound version was a rough
process that tended to break the thing.
With the method you are describing I'll bet you won't be utilizing the speed
controller function.
You will be at full speed all the time. Controlling the ground pressure is a
better idea imo.
Tom