IIRC, the Panasonic crank-motor won't run with an ordinary battery. It has to be the Panasonic one. Try german Ebay. There's usually a few large capacity ones there. Search for "Panasonic akku"Hey!
Just got an Helkama Cargo Bike, not sure the model..
Asuming its 26V. Panasonic motor.
The OEM battery are a fortune and I wonder how the bike will run on 24V?
Could it work? If so, I build my own battery and 3D print a new case
The Op doesn't have 36v , it is the panasonic 26v battery.36v motor controllers generally cut off power due to low voltage when a battery drops below 29-31v, (mine is 31v but others ??) iirc a 24v battery fully charged is 29v.. so while a 24v battery fully charged may start a 36v motor system on the bench it wont have any juice to move you any distance before the battery protection kicks in.
IIRC, the Panasonic crank-motor won't run with an ordinary battery. It has to be the Panasonic one. Try german Ebay. There's usually a few large capacity ones there. Search for "Panasonic akku"
Hm, sure? Only 3pins on my bike, but if I bypass that, my question is how the bike will behave on 24V?IIRC, the Panasonic crank-motor won't run with an ordinary battery. It has to be the Panasonic one. Try german Ebay. There's usually a few large capacity ones there. Search for "Panasonic akku"
In the case of lithium-ion batteries, 24v is 26v. It's just a preference for what people call them. They're both 7S, which charge to 29.4v and run down to 21v.Hm, sure? Only 3pins on my bike, but if I bypass that, my question is how the bike will behave on 24V?View attachment 58946
No, it not 3 pins it is a 5 pin system, different pins used for drive or charging. You have to use a correct Panasonic battery and charger only. See this web page and scroll down for pin information:Hm, sure? Only 3pins on my bike, but if I bypass that, my question is how the bike will behave on 24V?
Thanks for that, will give it a go thenIn the case of lithium-ion batteries, 24v is 26v. It's just a preference for what people call them. They're both 7S, which charge to 29.4v and run down to 21v.
Okey, thanks for the link, will give it a readNo, it not 3 pins it is a 5 pin system, different pins used for drive or charging. You have to use a correct Panasonic battery and charger only. See this web page and scroll down for pin information:
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You need to look at the battery connector on the bike. If it has only two wires connected to it, you can use any 24v battery. If it has three wires, you need to investigate the function of the third wire, then either provide it or spoof it.Okey, thanks for the link, will give it a read
It has to have three connections to operate the motor and four connections between charger and battery with this motor and battery system.You need to look at the battery connector on the bike. If it has only two wires connected to it, you can use any 24v battery. If it has three wires, you need to investigate the function of the third wire, then either provide it or spoof it.
What's the function of the third wire?It has to have three connections to operate the motor and four connections between charger and battery with this motor and battery system.
View attachment 58947
Yes.AFAICS in your pictures, the battery connector has two wires-red and white. Is that a very old one with NiHM battery?
They of course had their units to play with, something I never had with the lithium system. A further difficulty is that these had different versions according to the bike maker's requirements. That thread starts with a BH bike with the lower power system and 8Ah battery originally created by Panasonic for Dutch maker Gazelle, and these motor versions had internal differences.There's something about how to do it here. There's a link to a French forum, where there are more details. On ES, the guy said that he by-passed the BMS and it worked, but on that French forum, the it looks like the BMS was used.
PANASONIC ebike battery change
Hi experts, I have a BH pedelec bycicle with a Panasonic motor and a standard battery pack of 26V x 8A. After 3 and half years of loyal services I guess that very shortly this battery has to retire :-) With the Cycle Analyst I can see that the voltage sag is huge and that capaciity is down at...endless-sphere.com
Cheers i thought it was a typo,, doh!!The Op doesn't have 36v , it is the panasonic 26v battery.
Easy mistake if you haven't been involved with ebikes since the dark ages, like we have. Why did they call it 26v, when everyone else calls it 24v? It's not as bad as when KTM called their bike 47v, when it had a 13S battery. I think that was a trick because EN15194 says "up to 48v" and they wanted to make sure that it was definitely below, even though it charged to 54.6v.Cheers i thought it was a typo,, doh!!