MetroDuck
Member
My wife and I are getting ready to take scenic trip on our bikes in a little over a week. The total distance is 42 miles. I wanted to do a test this week to make sure we were not going to be peddling a 57 lb bike for the final stretch. The magnum website indicates a range of 30-50 miles. I knew from previous use that 40 was probably a pretty safe number. I charged the bike on Tuesday evening and then made 3 round trips to work and back; 11.5 mile per round trip. My wife and I also took some rides in the evening. Tonight I went on a ride to see if I could get to 50 miles.
I was at 50.8 miles when the battery gauge went from flashing to empty. I give a moderate effort when I ride with my pulse maxing out at 110-120 which is what the dr. ordered for this 59 year old. I'm no lightweight either at 220 lbs (down 10 lbs after riding 415 miles during my first 7 weeks with the bike). So I think the Magnum estimates are good, even conservative. My wife got a cruiser 2 weeks ago. It has 97 miles on it and it still has two bars. We have only charged it once and when it dropped from 2 to 1 bar. She weighs much less then me so I think she would likely get 60 miles per charge. We forgot to reset the trip-one odometer the one time we did charge it so we don't know for sure.
As for the battery indicator I have been watching that and it seems to stay on full charge a long time and then drops bars quicker then expected. I watched more closely this charge and here is what I observed.
- A full charge for me is 54.4 volts on the BMS indicator
- The battery gauge drops drops from one bar to flashing at 44.9 volts on the BMS indicator
- At 42.9 volts the flashing will stop and the indicator will show empty even if the battery voltage goes back above 42.9 volts. I went a couple more tenths of a mile and the motor was still operating at normally at 42.6 volts.
I suspect that the battery cutoff might be 41.9 volts? Full discharge of the batteries to the danger point would be in the high 30's so I think the BMS is pretty conservative in protecting your battery.
So based on my observation this evening I'm pretty confident that once the gauge starts flashing that I have 6-8 good miles left before it shows empty. Another way I look at this is that at full charge I get 5-6 miles for a one-volt loss on the BMS. Towards the end (mid 40's volts) I get 3-4 miles per volt.
I didn't think too much of it when I bought the bike but being able to see the voltage on the indicator is a great feature for me.
I'll report back after we take our trip a week from Monday on the Banks-Vernonia State Trail.
I was at 50.8 miles when the battery gauge went from flashing to empty. I give a moderate effort when I ride with my pulse maxing out at 110-120 which is what the dr. ordered for this 59 year old. I'm no lightweight either at 220 lbs (down 10 lbs after riding 415 miles during my first 7 weeks with the bike). So I think the Magnum estimates are good, even conservative. My wife got a cruiser 2 weeks ago. It has 97 miles on it and it still has two bars. We have only charged it once and when it dropped from 2 to 1 bar. She weighs much less then me so I think she would likely get 60 miles per charge. We forgot to reset the trip-one odometer the one time we did charge it so we don't know for sure.
As for the battery indicator I have been watching that and it seems to stay on full charge a long time and then drops bars quicker then expected. I watched more closely this charge and here is what I observed.
- A full charge for me is 54.4 volts on the BMS indicator
- The battery gauge drops drops from one bar to flashing at 44.9 volts on the BMS indicator
- At 42.9 volts the flashing will stop and the indicator will show empty even if the battery voltage goes back above 42.9 volts. I went a couple more tenths of a mile and the motor was still operating at normally at 42.6 volts.
I suspect that the battery cutoff might be 41.9 volts? Full discharge of the batteries to the danger point would be in the high 30's so I think the BMS is pretty conservative in protecting your battery.
So based on my observation this evening I'm pretty confident that once the gauge starts flashing that I have 6-8 good miles left before it shows empty. Another way I look at this is that at full charge I get 5-6 miles for a one-volt loss on the BMS. Towards the end (mid 40's volts) I get 3-4 miles per volt.
I didn't think too much of it when I bought the bike but being able to see the voltage on the indicator is a great feature for me.
I'll report back after we take our trip a week from Monday on the Banks-Vernonia State Trail.