Mom of one
New Member
@George S.Hi,
No problem on working this out.
Basically you have a bike without a battery. The battery is 24 volts. If you can install another battery, in the front basket or anywhere else, the battery has to be 24 volts, to be safe, or maybe around 36 volts. I don't think you need to go to a 36 volt, for the size of motor. The way they connect the battery to the ebike is not simple. My last factory bike had a battery with two terminals, and I could put connectors on the bike for the battery. They could make it hard to connect anything but the Panasonic pack. That is something a shop would have to try. I'm pretty sure Bosch makes it hard to substitute a battery with a chip or circuit. It's easy when there are just two terminals. The battery slid into these terminals, and I put connectors in the same spot. This isn't permanent, just an experiment, so it's a little rough. Basically I could connect any 36 volt battery to my ebike in this manner. You need a battery that delivers high amperage, but that is what ebike batteries do.
View attachment 4725
The exact battery does seem to be available from Japanese vendors. You'd have to ask them about the shipping. There is also an upgrade or larger battery, apparently. I hope you gave Paul that model number, but I'm not sure if he can build that battery. I've dealt with Rakuten in the US. They are basically a very junior Amazon, and they are a 'mall' for small stores or store fronts. How they would or could ship is something they would have to tell you. I know that a lot of ebike batteries get put in boxes and no one mentions what is inside. They are cracking down on this. They would have the data sheets on the batteries they sell. It would be up to them. I don't know what happens to the original battery, but I guess it is just a 'refugee'.
I would definitely ask those Japanese vendors who have the battery how they could ship it, and the cost. Otherwise, I think you need to find a local ebike store that is willing to try to figure out how to mount a different battery. That is figuring how to make the connections. Panasonic is a big corporation. They are the folks who tend to lock people in to their batteries and parts. But someone would have to dig around to determine the compatibility. If you could verify that the online vendors, in Japan, have the exact battery, and if the price with shipping is reasonable, that might be the surer bet. Digging around to connect a battery is great if they can determine compatibility in 10 minutes, but anything more is a gamble.
I agree that it's an interesting design, and someone could configure something like that for the US market. I'm not sure what it would take to establish the market. There is a big market for 'cargo' bikes, including the recent RadWagon.
Hey!
Paul can provide a 24 V battery. But he unfortunately doesn't know the bike. I think they are still obscure outside of Japan. He has offered to help if I can tell him more about the battery, but i have no more knowledge and I think you are right, I should bring it to a shop and have someone look at it first.
At this point I understand the variables. I think the next amp rating for this bike is 13.8 Ah, which I would be interested in. But I am in contact with a very experienced man in Kyoto who is trying to see if he can get my battery here.
He has a blog and has been working on implementing a export plan for them for a while now.
Its worth posting in case anyone is interested in these bikes like me.
http://mamabicycle.blogspot.ca/
Second plan is to follow up with Japanese online companies, like you suggested. Its a little hard though because no MSDS exist for any of these brand of e-bikes apparently. I might try sending a data sheet for the kind of batteries inside and see what happens. I think I have narrowed it down to NCR 18650's.
I have also found a woman who has a Bridgestone e-bike in San Fran. Same concept and in competition with Panasonic in Japan. She actually bought hers used and the japanese woman she bought it from had rigged a extra battery in the basket for when the old battery lost juice. I think it was one of the early models and the battery was a bit worn. So if i do get the original some how, that may be an option to...?
Still waiting to hear back from Japan. Mmmmmmmaybe there is still a shot of getting the original, but I'm not that optimistic at this point.
Thanks George.
Oh yeah-I have been comparing my mount on the charger and bike to the German panasonic batteries that @J.R. recommended and they still have 5 contacts but use 4 pins instead of 3.I find that very curious....
J.R 50 cycles doesn't seem to be savvy about shipping just batteries. Or maybe there is some restriction in the U.K but I haven't come to them with more info yet. Still waiting to see is the original can make it to a cargo plane. Otherwise I will start asking them to look into it further. It looks to be the exact same battery otherwise.