All of the above, and here's why.True, false, not that simple....
It's about the passivation layer or Interfacial protective film and trying to limit or reduce plating. That's why i mentioned "some people think". It's a hot debate.I have not heard of conditioning a Li battery. Any sources to support such a suggestion (other than outdated manuals written with NiCd in mind)?
Why does my owners manual and my wife's manual (a different brand), say to charge after every use?
To prevent charge from dropping too low on your next trip. It's easier this way.Why does my owners manual and my wife's manual (a different brand), say to charge after every use?
To prevent charge from dropping too low on your next trip. It's easier this way.
Note that you said "charge", not "fully charge" - don't know whether your manual uses exactly this wording, but this is how you should do it, to prolong the battery life. There is a balancing act here, you can fully charge and deeply discharge, and to shorten its life - or you can charge to 90% and take chances to discharge it way too deep or completely run out of juice on a long trip because you didn't have enough energy stored in there.
Full disclosure, more-less, should've been like this:
Don't discharge below 20%,
Charge no more than 90% if you will be using it soon,
Charge to 40-60% if you're going to put it in storage for several weeks.
This is - according to Justin "Grin" and other guys in the know.
If some manufacturer manual had all this, - especially the line about 20-90% - the reaction of an average consumer would've been like "Whaa? you told me the battery was 600 WH and now telling me that I can only use 600*70%= 420W". And then, such an honest guy would've been in disadvantage because many other wouldn't do this, unless such a disclosure was strictly enforced by the law.
HiFull disclosure, more-less, should've been like this:
Don't discharge below 20%,
Charge no more than 90% if you will be using it soon,
Charge to 40-60% if you're going to put it in storage for several weeks.
.
Hi
What do mean by soon?
Immediate take off on you e-bike? 15 minutes? 1 hour?
If I charge to 100% how soon should start riding my bike to start discharge?
Could you post the source for your graph. I am interested in investigating more. Thanks in Advance
Hi
What do mean by soon?
Immediate take off on you e-bike? 15 minutes? 1 hour?
If I charge to 100% how soon should start riding my bike to start discharge?
So all this means I should never charge to 100% if I really care about battery longevity?Q. 1. Few days, up to (maybe) one week. Nobody would tell you exact number, they are still learning and gathering data.
Q. 2. Better don't charge it to 100%, but - the sooner you start discharging, the better. High charging, low discharging, hot ambient, discharge current/power too high, charging current too high - everything contributes to the big picture. If you won't use it at all, it will still die