Andy_in_CA
Active Member
yeah it seem like the most I can charge my 12.8ah battery is 53.7v which is fine for me as i just "eyeball" the time or put it on a timer.
How "occasionally" with regular daily use do you think? (I am waiting on my RCS 52V.)I asked Juiced about this and according them their packs will not balance on a partial charge so you make a good point for people. Occasional full charging is good to balance charge the pack.
If you knew approximately how long it would take to charge to 80%, could you plug the charger into an electrical outlet timer, set the timer and walk away?
Lol now I sound dumb... I don't have the bike yet and the Juiced S page was a bit sparse and I don't think it says the amperage of the charger. Thanks for clearing that up, I see Belkin has a $10 device that looks good.As Reid pointed out, with the stock 2 Amp hour battery, you can count on -- wait for it -- 2 amps per hour. So if you know how much you've used, or how much you want to recharge, then you know how much time to set your timer for. With the LCD readout on my CCS, I can know exactly what the state of charge is, if I ever want to try this timed-charging lark.
I was thinking of buying the Grin, but since I would still have to charge to 100% every once in a while to balance decided against it.
I don’t follow your logic. You get 400-500 cycles out of the battery if you charge to 100%. So if you charge to 100% once a month to balance the cells, and keep it <80% the rest of the time, that’s 12/500 cycles per year. Your battery would still last many, many years. In all likelihood the battery would outlast the bike.
The average consumer is clueless about lithium ion battery charging so they aren’t going to see the value in a more sophisticated charger. That’s why most e-bike manufacturers only include a basic charger with the bike.
Keep in mind that some people use their bike every day (or charge twice per day while commuting). So if they charged to 100% every time they would hit that 500 cycle mark in a year or two and have to shell out $750-1000 for a new battery. The average user is probably charging once a week or less so for them a 100% makes a lot more sense.
I continue to think that this concern with the 80% charging is over-thinking the issue. Let's say you don't let your battery get below 20% charge, which is pretty easy to do either with instrumentation or paying attention to the bike's performance and getting a feel for when it has lost significant power. Most bikes today can easily get 25 miles going from 100% to 20%; that may be too conservative but it's an easy number to work with. (My Crosscurrent S gets over 50 miles under those conditions.) If you get 500 charge cycles -- again, this is probably a conservative estimate -- then you've ridden 12,500 miles. If you ride 25 miles every day, then you can expect your battery to last 500 days. Put away a little money -- $5 here, $10 bucks there -- and by the time a year and a half has gone by, you've got enough saved (painlessly) to buy a new battery.
And, with some experience now, fooling around with how to get the most out of my CCS, I've come to agree with Tora -- these bikes work best and are the most fun when they are at full power. If you always lop off the top 20% of the charge, you will never fully appreciate the awesome machines that these bikes can be.
I just got my CCS, with the 17.4 Ah battery, in January. I'm already starting to save for the 52 volt 21 Ah battery. I fully expect to get the most out of the battery I have, and still have a viable battery by the time I'm ready to plunk down the big bucks for the big battery.
But I get it; if some folks want to extend their battery's life as far as conceivably possible, then by all means they should go right ahead regardless of what others are doing. A little bit of math and putting the charger on a timer is a cheap solution, if you don't want to pay the price for a Grin Satiator or something similar.
It certainly is possible and i have several riders I ve helped set theirs up, but many of us have two or more voltages, and BMS capable of higher charges rates. The Satiator is more than a single voltage charger.I
But I get it; if some folks want to extend their battery's life as far as conceivably possible, then by all means they should go right ahead regardless of what others are doing. A little bit of math and putting the charger on a timer is a cheap solution, if you don't want to pay the price for a Grin Satiator or something similar.