One of the features of the XP that I'm not particularly happy with is the way the way the display allows monitoring distance (ODO), trip, voltage, or motor current, but only one at a time. I don't care about the odometer - in my rural area, roads are all in one-mile increments, so I usually know how far I've ridden more accurately than the grossly inaccurate odometer. I've settled on watching the current as I ride, which is the best indication of how much power you're drawing from the battery. But I'd also like to monitor the battery voltage at the same time, as watching the voltage sag as you draw more current is a good indication of remaining charge in the battery.
Watching the voltage for a couple rides I noticed that the "Energy Bar" at the top of the display precisely follows the voltage reading at the bottom (when set to monitor voltage). Today I rode with a partially-charged battery (trying to get it down to "storage voltage" for the winter) and found that it may be able to be "calibrated" to read volts rather than just showing a percentage-of-scale. Half-scale appears to be around 47 volts, where a fully-charged battery showing full scale is around 51. "No bars" would probably correspond to the low-voltage cut-off, either 40 or 41.5 volts (if you have an older XP that you can change that setting). So it appears the "Energy Bar" is simply a graphic voltmeter reading between 40 and 51 volts using a bar graph.
My "hack" is going to be to (temporarily) power the bike with a variable bench power supply (instead of the battery), and annotate the exact voltage required to illuminate each of the bars on the Energy Bar graph. With this "crib sheet" I'll then know the battery voltage based on the number of bars showing and thus be able to achieve my goal of simultaneously watching voltage and current.
I'll post the results for anyone who'd also like to "calibrate" their Energy Bar...
Bud
Watching the voltage for a couple rides I noticed that the "Energy Bar" at the top of the display precisely follows the voltage reading at the bottom (when set to monitor voltage). Today I rode with a partially-charged battery (trying to get it down to "storage voltage" for the winter) and found that it may be able to be "calibrated" to read volts rather than just showing a percentage-of-scale. Half-scale appears to be around 47 volts, where a fully-charged battery showing full scale is around 51. "No bars" would probably correspond to the low-voltage cut-off, either 40 or 41.5 volts (if you have an older XP that you can change that setting). So it appears the "Energy Bar" is simply a graphic voltmeter reading between 40 and 51 volts using a bar graph.
My "hack" is going to be to (temporarily) power the bike with a variable bench power supply (instead of the battery), and annotate the exact voltage required to illuminate each of the bars on the Energy Bar graph. With this "crib sheet" I'll then know the battery voltage based on the number of bars showing and thus be able to achieve my goal of simultaneously watching voltage and current.
I'll post the results for anyone who'd also like to "calibrate" their Energy Bar...
Bud