The motor is what turns a battery charge into range and hill-climbing — and the type of motor a wheelchair uses quietly sets its efficiency, noise level, maintenance load and service life. Two motor types appear in mobility products: the older brushed DC motor and the newer brushless DC motor (BLDC). They look similar bolted to a wheel, but they behave very differently over a product's life. Here's the practical comparison for distributors and importers deciding what to stock — and why almost all modern electric wheelchairs run brushless.
How the two motors actually work
Both are electric motors that spin a wheel; the difference is how they switch the current that creates rotation.
- A brushed motor uses physical carbon brushes pressing against a rotating commutator to switch the current. It's a mature, low-cost design — but those brushes are a wearing contact part: they rub, they spark, and over time they wear down and need replacing.
- A brushless motor does the same switching electronically, with a controller instead of brushes. With no rubbing contact to wear out, the motor runs cooler, quieter and longer, and converts more of the battery's energy into movement.
That single design difference — mechanical brushes vs electronic switching — is what drives every line in the comparison below.
Side-by-side: brushed vs brushless
| Brushed DC motor | Brushless DC motor (BLDC) | |
|---|---|---|
| Efficiency | Lower — energy lost at the brushes | Higher — more charge becomes range |
| Maintenance | Brushes wear and need periodic replacement | No brushes to replace — lower upkeep |
| Noise | Higher (brush contact + sparking) | Lower / quieter running |
| Service life | Shorter — limited by brush wear | Longer — no wearing contact part |
| Heat | Runs warmer under load | Runs cooler |
| Up-front cost | Lower (needs no controller) | Higher motor + controller, lower lifetime cost |
| Controller | Simple | Requires an electronic controller |
Note: these are general motor-type tendencies. The finished chair's range and hill performance also depend on battery capacity, total motor wattage, weight and tyres — so always compare full chair specs, not motor type alone.
Why brushless became the standard for electric wheelchairs
For a medical mobility device that people rely on daily, the brushless trade-off is easy to justify:
- Efficiency = range. More of each charge reaches the wheels, so the same battery goes further — a direct selling point for end-users.
- Lower maintenance = fewer service calls. No brushes to wear out means one less consumable part and fewer after-sales visits over the chair's life — which matters to whoever owns the warranty.
- Quieter and cooler. Less noise indoors and less heat under sustained load suit everyday and indoor use.
- Longer service life. With no rubbing contact to degrade, the motor outlasts a comparable brushed unit.
The honest trade-off is higher up-front cost, because a brushless motor needs an electronic controller. For a daily-use medical device, that cost is generally repaid through efficiency and reduced maintenance — which is why brushless has become the default across the modern electric-wheelchair category, and why brushed motors now mostly survive in the cheapest, lightest-duty products.
How it maps to the Wanderoll line
Across Wanderoll's ten-model range, the powered models use brushless motors — the practical choice for a daily-use medical device. Motor wattage is matched to the chair's job, not maximised for a spec-sheet number — a light travel chair doesn't need the same drive as a heavier comfort model:
| Chair | Motor | Built for |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon One | Dual 150 W brushless | Lightest carbon travel flagship |
| Air Lite | Dual 200 W brushless | Ultralight everyday travel |
| Air Pro | Dual 200 W brushless | Ergonomic everyday use |
| City Power | Dual 300 W brushless | City range with higher user weight |
| Tilt | Dual 350 W brushless | Tilt-in-space comfort model |
The pattern is visible in the numbers: a light Carbon One runs a modest dual 150 W drive because it carries less chair, while a heavier comfort model like Tilt steps up to dual 350 W to move more weight and handle inclines. Same motor type across the range — brushless — with the wattage scaled to the chair's purpose.
How to choose motor power for your buyers
There's no single "right" wattage — there's the right drive for how the chair will be used:
- Light travel and portability → a lower-wattage brushless drive (such as the dual 150 W Carbon One) keeps weight down for buyers who lift the chair into a car or take it on trips.
- Everyday city use → a mid-range brushless drive (the dual 200 W Air models) balances range and weight for general daily mobility.
- Higher user weight, longer distances or inclines → a stronger brushless drive (the dual 300 W City Power, dual 350 W Tilt) gives the torque to move more weight and climb gradients.
Two practical reminders for selection: total wattage matters more than a single figure — a "dual 200 W" chair has two motors, one per drive wheel — and motor power is only one half of the equation. Pair it with the right battery capacity for the range your market expects, and always read motor and battery specs together.
Not sure which drive fits your market? Tell us your channel, typical user weight and the range your buyers expect, and we'll recommend the models — with full motor and battery specs and certificates. → Request a quote



