I would not give up on this so fast, I've seen German fellas offering Bosch rebuilds. Personally I would buy a heavy duty soldering iron and some fresh cells and try it myself. Not that I can recommend anyone try this, in fact Don't try this at home! Utube is full of guys building power packs for cars etc, endless sphere - research.You might be thinking 'rebuild' which makes more sense, but the answer would still be no.
...instead of buying a brand new one?
I just replaced my Stromer's 14.5 Ah battery after 2.5 years of riding and it cost me $775. I am hoping to find a cheaper way to keep my bike on the road the next time I need one. On my last battery I chargeed it after every ride, but now I charge it when it gets down below 50% - I hope that helps prolong it's life.
Does anyone know if the 3.6V batteries inside Stromer's battery packs are welded together or kept inside some sort of frame/case? How easy would it be to buy 50 batteries from Samsung when my current 522Wh pack degrades beyond usable? I'm not trying to cheat or something, just worried that maybe after 1.5/2 years Stromer may stop selling ST1 packs and consumers will be left with heavy and slow not-anymore-e-bikes.
I just replaced my Stromer's 14.5 Ah battery after 2.5 years of riding and it cost me $775. I am hoping to find a cheaper way to keep my bike on the road the next time I need one. On my last battery I chargeed it after every ride, but now I charge it when it gets down below 50% - I hope that helps prolong it's life.
Great advice. Did your battery last as long as you expected it to? Did you let it drop below 10% or even down to where it ran out of power completely? That definitely will reduce the life of a Stromer or any other battery.Every time you ride, put a dollar in a jar. Then it won't hurt so badly when you buy the new battery.