jabberwocky
Well-Known Member
I posted some info in the Revolt thread, but since info on this thing is pretty sparse online, I thought maybe a dedicated thread would be helpful.
I got my Energypak Plus a few weeks ago, and finally got the firmware updated so I could use it. First ride was yesterday.
Prior to getting it, the info I could find online said the bike would run the main battery down, then switch to the extender. After using it, thats not how it works. The bike seems to pull from both of them while riding, and the battery percentage is based on the combined total. I finished with 31% remaining (for both), and after removing the extender it said the main had 14% left. So over the ride it pulled 424whr from both, ~323whr (of 375) out of the main and 101 (of 240) from the extender. I'll keep track of use on future rides to try and understand the logic. I'm pleased it pulls from both while riding though; if nothing else, its better for battery health to not run them totally down.
I will comment that the battery percentage while riding did seem to go down in steps. Like, it would deplete linearly for a bit, then hold a percentage for a bit, then deplete some more. Overall was as expected. My weight (220lb) and riding style (almost entirely eco, 100% assist) and terrain (hilly, primarily unpaved) I consume a pretty consistent 11.5-12whr per mile. I expected main+extender range to be 50-52ish miles, and consumption was extremely close to that.
The plus does have a USB port (on the bottom close the cable), so you could use it as a gigantic battery bank if you wanted.
Bike will not work with just the extender. I don't really see why it wouldn't in theory, but the software throws an error if you try. Not something I'd ever do anyway, but I tried it out of curiosity.
On the bike (extender is unplugged because main battery is charging, but it just plugs into the same port as the charger):
Charging cable collection. Left to right: main charging port, adapter to charge battery directly, adapter to charge extender. To the left of the charging brick is my spare main battery.
Install. There are dedicated mounts for the plate, and a slot for the water bottle cage bosses. Install was simple. Remove main battery, pop the plastic plugs out of the mounting points, use the included hardware to screw it on. Only annoyance was all the cables and wires that run along the top of the battery well, but it still only took a few minutes. It also came with a plastic plate that you could attach a bottle cage to that pops onto the whole mount, though you could also just screw a cage on as normal.
Removal. Swing out this little lever (which can be screwed down to make it harder to remove):
Pop the main catch:
Swing it out:
It came with this small trunk bag to carry it in.
What you get if you power the bike up with the energypak plus plugged in but without a main battery:
I got my Energypak Plus a few weeks ago, and finally got the firmware updated so I could use it. First ride was yesterday.
Prior to getting it, the info I could find online said the bike would run the main battery down, then switch to the extender. After using it, thats not how it works. The bike seems to pull from both of them while riding, and the battery percentage is based on the combined total. I finished with 31% remaining (for both), and after removing the extender it said the main had 14% left. So over the ride it pulled 424whr from both, ~323whr (of 375) out of the main and 101 (of 240) from the extender. I'll keep track of use on future rides to try and understand the logic. I'm pleased it pulls from both while riding though; if nothing else, its better for battery health to not run them totally down.
I will comment that the battery percentage while riding did seem to go down in steps. Like, it would deplete linearly for a bit, then hold a percentage for a bit, then deplete some more. Overall was as expected. My weight (220lb) and riding style (almost entirely eco, 100% assist) and terrain (hilly, primarily unpaved) I consume a pretty consistent 11.5-12whr per mile. I expected main+extender range to be 50-52ish miles, and consumption was extremely close to that.
The plus does have a USB port (on the bottom close the cable), so you could use it as a gigantic battery bank if you wanted.
Bike will not work with just the extender. I don't really see why it wouldn't in theory, but the software throws an error if you try. Not something I'd ever do anyway, but I tried it out of curiosity.
On the bike (extender is unplugged because main battery is charging, but it just plugs into the same port as the charger):
Charging cable collection. Left to right: main charging port, adapter to charge battery directly, adapter to charge extender. To the left of the charging brick is my spare main battery.
Install. There are dedicated mounts for the plate, and a slot for the water bottle cage bosses. Install was simple. Remove main battery, pop the plastic plugs out of the mounting points, use the included hardware to screw it on. Only annoyance was all the cables and wires that run along the top of the battery well, but it still only took a few minutes. It also came with a plastic plate that you could attach a bottle cage to that pops onto the whole mount, though you could also just screw a cage on as normal.
Removal. Swing out this little lever (which can be screwed down to make it harder to remove):
Pop the main catch:
Swing it out:
It came with this small trunk bag to carry it in.
What you get if you power the bike up with the energypak plus plugged in but without a main battery: