Hey guys, has anyone seen this problem? Top battery keeps jumping out of its slot when I hit a bump.
So today I took the dirt road into Joshua Tree National Park - no gate there, just ride on in. That road doesn't connect up with any of the paved amenities but does go to Eureka Peak, about 5000' total and more than 1500' from my starting elevation. Round trip 25mi. It's high enough to have gotten snow recently and that snow was starting to melt, so just where the climb got steep I had to contend with barely solid snow, mud, and sand. Just what our bikes are made for, right?
I have a few more observations. The first is that I mainly enjoyed myself, got more exercise than I have in ages, and I wouldn't have been doing it but for my new ebike. For those who don't know, a Joshua tree is actually a cactus, but it's the size and approximate shape of a tree - see the photo or google for a better one. It was gorgeous, and over 50 degrees Fahrenheit when I left though of course colder at the top. From the peak I can see my town in one direction, Palm Springs in the other. I tried to get pictures but without telephoto they don't turn out, and with telephoto you get no sense of scale.
Second, my bike has a conventional cassete, 11-speed, instead of the IGH, and it has a wider range of gears. Though I said before I didn't need those big gears after all, even on a steep hill, that changes in muck. I was using low gear a lot. However, when the going gets tough and I have a choice between feathering the throttle or shifting to a lower gear and have power cut out briefly, it seemed safer to go for throttle.
Third, the bike may be made for these conditions, but I'm not. I tumbled twice, no damage just messy. There's a paradox involved, in that I needed a minimum speed to get through the sloppiest parts, but too much speed and I'd miss the next curve. Mud was definitely better for traction than half-melted snow. I briefly regretted ditching those pathetic fenders but quickly realized they'd have made no real difference. If the slick sloppy surface was tough going up, it was scary coming down. Hey, I don't heal as fast as I used to. But thats not where I fell, and I'm now a big believer in quad piston hydraulic disk brakes.
I put 18psi in my tires, not sure if less would have been better. Previously I noticed climbing a 5% grade cost about 4% battery per mile, net 2% per mile when coasting back down. I was noticing the same 4% per mile at half the steepness on sand, until I had the problem I opened this post with. I kept in low PAS, never higher than 3, with throttle pulses to get through the muck, and worried the whole time about my power budget. When I reached the top, I was showing 30%, but after a short rest, I was showing 48%. And of course I needed little power on the way back down. Average under 10mph going up, a little over 10 coming back and that mostly because I was riding the brakes for the first third of the descent. On balance I used almost a full charge on 2 batteries for just 25 slow miles. (Caveat: My display seems to be programmed with 26" tire diameter, and of course that's the rim not the outside, so my mileage a speed readouts may be a bit off.)
So, what's happening with my top battery is that it comes loose from the lower end, where the lock is. Popped halfway out at that end, it's still making contact at the higher end, until I hit another bump. A bump on a curve, when I was leaning the bike, actually caused it to fall all the way out. Fortunately it had soft ground to land on. I'm thinking this is a potentially serious flaw, and I rather fix the mechanism than deal with a ratchet strap every time I head out. So far, I haven't inspected the mechanism - my bike's still caked with mud, and tomorrow when it warms back up is soon enough to check it out.
EDIT: Threw the chain again, same as before off the chain ring to the outside. I found a website that calculates BCD from where the bolt holes are placed, 130mm for the Biktrix Beast, and ordered a chain guard from amazon, but as usual shipping is delayed.