I opened the pack and I can't find anything wrong. In fact, I have measured between pads in the packs and all were giving around the same volts (range of differences is within +/-0.05 volts, so it seemed pretty well).
When charging, I don't disconnect the charger immediately. I keep the bike in a storage room out of my flat, so I leave it charging for hours or even days, so in case a prolonged charge would help to balance cells, that would have already happened.
What seems to improve the behavior is to discharge the battery slowly (with a resistance -ie; a heater-). I make it go below the point where the led scale does not show any led lit. I stop around 32V cause I'm afraid of over-discharging, even when it is expected the BMS won't allow such over-discharge. A charge after that takes significantly longer, and doing that last weekend, I did a 45 Km route without any issue. Not sure if it has any explanation (like discharging overcharged -unbalanced- cells, and then the following charge will balance the pack) or it was just a lucky day.
My ideal situation is the battery may show signs of aging in the sense of shorter range, but at least does not power off. I understand a battery with 9000Km on it (after 3 years of usage) may have lost a significant capacity percentage, but what puzzles me is the battery stops completely at random.
When charging, I don't disconnect the charger immediately. I keep the bike in a storage room out of my flat, so I leave it charging for hours or even days, so in case a prolonged charge would help to balance cells, that would have already happened.
What seems to improve the behavior is to discharge the battery slowly (with a resistance -ie; a heater-). I make it go below the point where the led scale does not show any led lit. I stop around 32V cause I'm afraid of over-discharging, even when it is expected the BMS won't allow such over-discharge. A charge after that takes significantly longer, and doing that last weekend, I did a 45 Km route without any issue. Not sure if it has any explanation (like discharging overcharged -unbalanced- cells, and then the following charge will balance the pack) or it was just a lucky day.
My ideal situation is the battery may show signs of aging in the sense of shorter range, but at least does not power off. I understand a battery with 9000Km on it (after 3 years of usage) may have lost a significant capacity percentage, but what puzzles me is the battery stops completely at random.