Justin Fischer
Active Member
Greetings all, I just did some math to figure out how to charge my battery to 80% based on timing the charge cycle on the basic 2 amp charger. Here's what I came up with:
The 52V, 19.2AH battery is actually listed as 52V, 19.2AH on the label, so that's good, I'm not sure where the 52V, 21AH battery listed on the Juiced website comes for battery life comes from. But based on Juiced's documentation that they are LG batteries, 14 series (52V) by 9 parallel, that gives them a nominal capacity of either 19 or 20AH based on LG's HE4 or MJ1, the closest available on https://www.ebikes.ca/tools/charge-simulator.html?bat=cust_c27_s14_p6_l30 Using ebike.ca's calculator, based on 56.3V = 80% = 16.35AH, here's a quick chart of battery voltages, levels, and percentages for the 52V battery available on the CCS and RipCurrent. I based this on them being MJ1 cells. If anyone knows for sure, please chime in.
48.7V - 20% - 4.08AH
49.3V - 25% - 5.10AH
49.8V - 30% - 6.12AH
50.4V - 35% - 7.14AH
51.0V - 40% - 8.17AH
51.4V - 45% - 9.19AH
52.1V - 50% - 10.21AH
52.8V - 55% - 11.24AH
53.5V - 60% - 12.26AH
54.2V - 65% - 13.28AH
54.9V - 70% - 14.31AH
55.4V - 75% - 15.33AH
56.3V - 80% - 16.35AH
Be aware, the CCS low voltage cutoff won't go higher than 43V (at least on mine). Feel free to correct me on my math if I messed anything up, and all values are rounded, including to a single place for voltage because that's what the onboard display will indicate.
To demonstrate, if you were at 20%, 4.08AH, and you wanted to get to 80%, 16.35AH, 16.35-4.08 = 12.27AH differences, at a charge rate of 2AH, gives you 6.135 hours, 6 hours and 8 minutes.
This is all a rough approximation, but if you haven't gotten a satiator yet, I hope this helps you estimate charge time to 80%.
The 52V, 19.2AH battery is actually listed as 52V, 19.2AH on the label, so that's good, I'm not sure where the 52V, 21AH battery listed on the Juiced website comes for battery life comes from. But based on Juiced's documentation that they are LG batteries, 14 series (52V) by 9 parallel, that gives them a nominal capacity of either 19 or 20AH based on LG's HE4 or MJ1, the closest available on https://www.ebikes.ca/tools/charge-simulator.html?bat=cust_c27_s14_p6_l30 Using ebike.ca's calculator, based on 56.3V = 80% = 16.35AH, here's a quick chart of battery voltages, levels, and percentages for the 52V battery available on the CCS and RipCurrent. I based this on them being MJ1 cells. If anyone knows for sure, please chime in.
48.7V - 20% - 4.08AH
49.3V - 25% - 5.10AH
49.8V - 30% - 6.12AH
50.4V - 35% - 7.14AH
51.0V - 40% - 8.17AH
51.4V - 45% - 9.19AH
52.1V - 50% - 10.21AH
52.8V - 55% - 11.24AH
53.5V - 60% - 12.26AH
54.2V - 65% - 13.28AH
54.9V - 70% - 14.31AH
55.4V - 75% - 15.33AH
56.3V - 80% - 16.35AH
Be aware, the CCS low voltage cutoff won't go higher than 43V (at least on mine). Feel free to correct me on my math if I messed anything up, and all values are rounded, including to a single place for voltage because that's what the onboard display will indicate.
To demonstrate, if you were at 20%, 4.08AH, and you wanted to get to 80%, 16.35AH, 16.35-4.08 = 12.27AH differences, at a charge rate of 2AH, gives you 6.135 hours, 6 hours and 8 minutes.
This is all a rough approximation, but if you haven't gotten a satiator yet, I hope this helps you estimate charge time to 80%.
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