Good point. I carry mine by hand to the shelf I place it on when I recharge it. I only ride on the road or groomed trail and avoid any potholes.I'm not surprised that age is a factor. The longer one uses the battery, the more it is handled and transported. Rough handling while sitting in the back of a vehicle, bouncing around in the trunk or on a bike rack during transport, can cause parts to shift or loosen inside the case. Even riding on very rough surfaces over time can cause internal damage.
I'm always dismayed when I see someone at a trailhead just throw a battery on the back seat and dive off. A sudden stop could cause it to slide off. I once saw someone open their car door and the battery fell out on the ground. Just because the battery looks like a brick, doesn't mean you can treat it like one.
Considering how much energy is stored in one of these things, I carry mine in a padded case:
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It is a small percentage. It’s a huge problem if it happens to you, but in the big picture it’s normal failure rate.Just for fun I looked up the number of bikes rad has sold. It said as of 2023 they have sold over 600,000 bikes and one can assume some people also bought extra batteries. 26 fires out of 600,000 bikes tells me that probably they are the result of owner abuse as in getting them wet, improper charging, a damaged battery from dropping it and other things I can't think of.
Thanks for the info, i did not know that.Depends how you want to define USA. Many scholars say that by international law, Taiwan is a US insular area from WWII. Meaning products made there, are made in USA.
https://www.civil-taiwan.org/hartzell5.pdf
26 / 600,000 = 0.004%. Just for fun, I did a search. Online quoted statistics are dubious, but that's about exactly the rate of fires for electric vehicles in general... which despite the hype, are a lot less common than fires in gasoline powered vehicles (but a lot more difficult to extinguish).Just for fun I looked up the number of bikes rad has sold. It said as of 2023 they have sold over 600,000 bikes and one can assume some people also bought extra batteries. 26 fires out of 600,000 bikes tells me that probably they are the result of owner abuse as in getting them wet, improper charging, a damaged battery from dropping it and other things I can't think of.
Yes, but it is a design flaw that will get worse with time, like bending a coat hanger back and forth. The number could climb very quickly, maybe exponentially.0.004%
The odds of a battery fire are like winning the lottery; you can't win if you don't buy a ticket.Tons of Rad bikes on FB Marketplace for $5-800, thinking about picking one up.
I don't drive, travel by e-bike for 6+ years. I had a Velotric I loved but it was stolen, I'm poor and could only afford a $450 36v bike from Amazon, it's less than ideal
Wondering if I should risk battery probs, which I suspect are overblown, and get a better quality bike.
That is how to get a winning ticket for free!Or the guy in the flat below buys one.
Wow, until recently, most of us here would say a Rad is good quality, probably more trustworthy than Veloctric, I still think it is.Tons of Rad bikes on FB Marketplace for $5-800, thinking about picking one up.
I don't drive, travel by e-bike for 6+ years. I had a Velotric I loved but it was stolen, I'm poor and could only afford a $450 36v bike from Amazon, it's less than ideal
Wondering if I should risk battery probs, which I suspect are overblown, and get a better quality bike.
To clarify, those 2 specific model numbers are the only ones called out by CPSC. Rad has had a number of different batteries over the years and there are lots of Rad bikes with different batteries on them.The battery model number (HL-RP-S1304 or RP-1304) is printed on a label on the back or rear of the battery. Run from these as fast as you can to avoid serious injury or death.
And are the batteries actually at fault or were the ones that caught fire the result of owner abuse? I'm thinking the latter or there would be a lot more of them.To clarify, those 2 specific model numbers are the only ones called out by CPSC. Rad has had a number of different batteries over the years and there are lots of Rad bikes with different batteries on them.