Chopperbill
Active Member
LOL, I put a Schwinn Seat $25 from Walmart. Old asses need more seat.Now that's an amazing ride, standing up the whole 50! Or very sore.
LOL, I put a Schwinn Seat $25 from Walmart. Old asses need more seat.Now that's an amazing ride, standing up the whole 50! Or very sore.
It's possible that the Pedego battery management system does not charge to 100%. As some have mentioned here, that is true of some battery management systems. I will ask Pedego tech support.
REPLY FROM PEDEGO:
I emailed Pedego tech support. Kris reports that Pedego battery chargers charge to 100%.
Not me! I still haven't seen any 4-year-old packs and their performance. As I read the specs it's perhaps less likely to have as many cycles as a few other currently popular cells. But I'm a bad engineer and all my experience is anecdotal with the GA.I put on my engineers hat and look at the spec sheet for a very good Sanyo GA cell, Wish all my batteries had this cell.
Max voltage per cells is 4.2 volts. A 48V battery is 13 cells in series for a MAX charge of 56.4VWhat is the reference point?
Replacing OEM seat with a wider and cushier is what many people have done, after switching from non-powered bike to E. Higher speeds result in heavier and more frequent impacts, need larger area and better vibration-damping. The idea is slowly dawning on consumers, manufacturers are lagging behind.Now that's an amazing ride, standing up the whole 50! Or very sore.
Max voltage per cells is 4.2 volts. A 48V battery is 13 cells in series for a MAX charge of 56.4V
14 in series is a 52V battery, MAX 58.8V
Typically chargers are sold labeled with the nominal voltage, 24, 36, 48, or 52V. Also with the maximum charge noted on the label. Don't remember 24V off hand... but 42V, 54.6V or 58.6V should be on the label.So to answer this question, would we need to ask to what voltage the battery charger charges the battery? What should I ask?
Number of cycles is not the only thing wearing the battery out. Battery aging process begins from the day one and doesn't stop.Yet the manufacturer's testing says it loses a third of its original capacity after 500 cycles.
Don't askSo to answer this question, would we need to ask to what voltage the battery charger charges the battery? What should I ask?
Some BMS are capable, but generally, you are correct.It wouldn't make sense if they made chargers that only charged to 80%. The cells would not balance properly.
But it would make sense if they made chargers where you could choose between 80%, 90%, 100%. Luna makes some, btw. Cheaper than Grin Satiator, though not as versatile.It wouldn't make sense if they made chargers that only charged to 80%. The cells would not balance properly.
I know it was mentioned already, But a good Volt/Ohm meter will give you a Accurate reading, and probably More accurate than your on board display. ?But it would make sense if they made chargers where you could choose between 80%, 90%, 100%. Luna makes some, btw. Cheaper than Grin Satiator, though not as versatile.
OEM chargers on many ebikes are a joke, too low current for modern 600-700WH batteries and no voltage indicator.
You missed the point entirely. You will never save $100 a year or anything close to that and worse you've limited yourself to very short range per ride. The marketing hype surrounding this topic has gotten way out of hand. It makes sense on a sophisticated vehicle where the battery costs thousands of dollars such as a Tesla. But on a relatively tiny ebike battery vs an EV car, it's absurd and impractical from a use standpoint. If some tech geek wants to document a use case, where they got X charge cycles, using 2 of the exact same battery packs, and alternating between them on every other ride, charging one between 20 and 80, and the other between 0 and 100%, and document total miles achieved until both batteries die, then show us the difference, I'll be all ears. Until then it's all highly speculative and for most users of ebikes just not worth the hassle or shortened range. If someone wants to waste $300 or whatever on a cycle satiator, far be it from me to stop them.What is important here is not 2.9 cents per mile, but $700 each year, if you ride a lot. Maybe you won't go broke treating battery as disposable. Still, many people choose to save $100-$200 a year by taking simple precautions like 20/80 charging, storing it out of cold and out of heat etc. I don't even want to touch pseudo-green nature of ebike batteries, this is a different topic.
I've been buying low end chargers from Aliexpress. All of $10 each. But they are from a good maker. Liitokala is one of the better companies for cheap chargers. At this price I keep a few backups around. IME chargers are typically a pain in the arse. I have Satiators, but keep these around for backup and traveling. OEM's sell them for $25-$30USD!!!It's 58.8V for 52V battery charger.
I bought two chargers from AliExpress and they're working great so far.
They're both 48V (54.6V) chargers and I have 3A and 4A
The 3A charger I bought is very light weight, small and compact.
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/329...-Charger&spm=a2g0s.9042311.0.0.62a94c4dTNyriO
Here's the 4A charger, it's working great.
I had an option to go 5A, 8A, 10A and 20A(!!!) but I heard that 4A should be the limit for most cheap/basic batteries so I just got the 4A version.
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/328...-Battery&spm=a2g0s.9042311.0.0.62a94c4dTNyriO
Not me! I still haven't seen any 4-year-old packs and their performance. As I read the specs it's perhaps less likely to have as many cycles as a few other currently popular cells. But I'm a bad engineer and all my experience is anecdotal with the GA.