As always, great work Stanley! Stoked to see this thing finally come to life I know you've been talking about for a long time. Now you know the drill, please send it to me for six months of rigorous testing 😜
@TheFloatLife YAY!!! That's what I was hoping it means!!!!! That's all I've been asking for for years since CBXR!!! Natoma loop and more w No range anxiety and torque!!
oh crap, we had this fusioncore idea 8months before and developed the v2 electronics to fit inside the core, thats why we designed it to be long and narrow, guess now we will have to share the same fusioncore name🤣
@@vesconewheel yep, originally gonna shove it inside a 5inch core so the v1 electronics wont fit anymore, and also the heat problem with the motor +esc, to further lower the heat, we made it 12fet design, this could live happily inside the core cuz it doenst generate noticeable heat.
@floatwheel ok, but what about the axle heat cooking the ESC? As a heavy rider, the Cannoncore is an absolute beast but at my weight it gets quite toasty. This thing is going to need active cooling or a heatpipe. Maybe special ADV rails that do a better job of wicking heat away.
“I just want good boards…” This is what makes this sport so special: the fact that it will only get better as technology and collaborative efforts enable it. This is evidenced once again in this video. Thank you, Stanley, for keeping the true purpose in mind: to have more capable, safer, and fun boards to ride!
Hell yeah my dude! I’m so stoked to see it working! The heat remains my biggest concern though haha. But the sort of range and power this opens up is incredible.
Him telling FM to do this and to go ahead is insane. All that hard work and development and he’s just like “yeah go ahead boys” talk about love of the sport. FM…. Just hire this dude. Offer him a job or something!!!
The old FM will patent it, claim they invented it and send cease and desist to Stanley. In the past year or so FM seems to be changing for the better so let's hope they would hire him.
@@fixmypev dm me his contact info? I’ve only read a bit about this, and I’m no patent attorney, but I have a couple patents and am relatively confident that they can sometimes be invalidated on the basis of prior art. Happy to run by folks who know more than I do once I have context.
You absolutely deserve to be paid. One does not need a patent to protect your design if it is unique. The world now knows you created this, anyone that claims they created it would need to show prior art dated before this, which they can not do. Best of luck going forward, you are a true innovator.
I don’t disagree with you in the fact that it’s an awesome design and Stanley deserves so much credit, it was actively discussed by Tony a while ago that his intention was to put the controller etc in the core and why they designed the canon core that way. Luckily for us they both seem to be on the same page.
@@ManifoldSky No, it is not legal to patent someone else's invention. Patent law is designed to protect the rights of inventors who have created new and non-obvious inventions. In order to obtain a patent, the invention must be novel (new), non-obvious, and useful. If someone attempts to patent an invention that they did not invent themselves, it would be considered patent infringement and could result in legal consequences. Patents are granted based on the principle of first inventorship, meaning the first person to invent a particular technology or product is entitled to the patent rights, provided they meet all the criteria for patentability. If you are aware of an invention that someone else has already created, you cannot patent it yourself. However, if you have made improvements or modifications to an existing invention that make it novel and non-obvious, you may be able to patent those improvements as long as they meet the patentability requirements. In summary, patent law protects inventors and their rights to their creations, and attempting to patent someone else's invention is not legal or ethical.
Very exciting! Some things I love about this design: - possibility of thinner rails for lower CoG / better clearance - ghosting would be somewhat less terrifying with a balanced board - accelerometer readings won't be skewed by centripetal force and angular acceleration
So much respect for you. Bro is literally changing the whole game for good. Love to see people who innovate. I cant even imagine where we will be in 5 years
Nice! I was planning to try to put an external accelerometer into the axle... But if this design can stay cool, it's a clear winner. Now gimme that 5" 🤣 Oh, also, what about the handle.
I have 0 electrical experience so i only understand 1% of all this lol, Is there a possibility to order a plug and play kit for a full functioning board to ship ? Anyway, awesome engineering lol, congratz ! 👊✌️
@@farah-5538 hell nah I'm afraid 😭 This design requires heavy motor plug modification, even if the rest of the board was sent in a functional state. Hence me saying that FM should tackle this design
@vesconewheel Damnit haha, onewheels are the reason i regret not doing electrical engineering lol😆 Well, here's to atleast your FM ticket to send the pioneer in ;) Keep up the good work man ! 💯
@@anthonytran3584 well does the board function any differently when you ride it in reverse? Point is, doesn't matter where the sensor is on your board, it'll function the same if it's calibrated correctly
Excellent work! Unfortunately I’ve seen zero evidence so far that higher voltage produces less heat… 100V and 50V on the same setup made no measurable difference in motor heat. Also the 30s controllers can’t run as cool as the Thor
You know I ride hard, and my CannonCore never gets into the 60*C. I suspect the airflow not being able to flow through the axle core is causing the higher CannonCore temps