battery drain while "acoustic biking"

spokewrench

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
With my new seat angle, I may not use any motor during an hour's ride. With the controller idle except to power the display, the battery drains faster than expected.
With no lights, the battery loses about 1% per hour of riding, or 6.8 Watts. With the head and tail light, it loses about 1.7% per hour, 11.6 Watts. That means the lights add about 4.8 Watts.
 
I'll watch for that. The connectors for my Aventon lights look like Julets but are smaller. That's one way to be sure I won't use lights the controller can't handle.
 
I recently replaced the pitiful headlight on my Pedego and was faced with the same controller power output issue.

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I didn't want to cut off the proprietary connector, so I measured the current draw on the OEM light by sticking pins in the connector holes and hooking up my multimeter. I found the OEM light draws 180 ma or 10W at 58V.

I was going to rig a relay to control a more powerful light, but found this one that was rated at just 8W.
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It's well reviewed on Amazon but at a higher price:

Since it wasn't rated, I was skeptical about the light output but bought it anyway. Before installing on the bike, I hooked it up on the workbench and measured the current at 140ma. Amazingly, the light output is at least 10X that of the OEM light yet draws 40ma less!! It also operates at 12V - 60V, so no relay was necessary.

I did have to cut off the OEM connector on the bike and solder on this Julet pigtail to fit the new light:

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Overall, I'm quite happy with the new light. It won't compete with my handlebar mounted Trail Evo floodlight, but for $40, it throws enough light to comfortably ride at night.
 
I've done a few Lezyne E300 and Fusion 550 conversions on Bosch e-bikes. I splice them instead of fishing to the motor. They've been well received.
I tried the Lezyne Classic HB, and it's a well engineered product that provides a lot of light. It operates on 12V though, so I had to rig a relay and use a 12V buck converter:

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The wire for the high / low/ beam switch wasn't long enough so I had to piece it out. I should have bought the E550 instead.

The light works fine, but required a lot of extras like the buck converter, relay and supplemental wiring.

The OZ light I mentioned in post #4 was nearly plug & play except for the connector. It cost $40 compared to $150 for the Lezyne. Both throw a comparable amount of light so I used the OZ on my other bikes instead. Much cleaner install without the relay, converter & wiring.

For Bosch systems, it would be a no brainer to use the Leyzne, but bikes without a 12V source require quite a bit of cobbling.
 
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