Hi everyone
Just got my first ebike and am looking for a bit of general advice about charging the battery
Am i better to let the battery run out of charge or can i recharge it to full even if its only partially empty
Sorry if its a dumb question lol
Thanks for any replies
John
There are so many opinions on Li-ion batteries, that hardly two Pedelecers can agree on anything.
I have had good results (never lost a battery in 12 years of e-biking) with the following:-
1) assuming a normal charger, I add a cheap 24 hour timer, to shut the power off to the charger, when I believe that the charge will be finished, I also rewire the timer, so at the same time all power is removed from the tiny motor in the timer as well! Its usually just moving a single wire to a different position!
There are some expensive chargers that remove all power, once the battery is full, but the only one I have ever seen, stll switched power back on if the charge dropped - not good IMHO in the longterm!
I prefer chargers with tiny fans inside to make sure the electronics are kept cool. Not all chargers have this feature.
2) Riding an e-bike till the BMS stops supplying power should do no harm to the battery, assuming that the BMS has been set correctly of course. On a 36v Nominal battery, that should be just over 30 volts if my memory serves me correctly. Buy a reasonable Multi Meter so that you can check such things out. Check also that the battery is at or close to 42 volts when charged (assuming a 36 volt battery of course!). Not over 42 volts (again assuming 36 volt battery).
If you don't like peddling home, then buy a second battery and take it with you for long distances.
3) I only charge my batteries when the BMS cuts power, as the bike is a daily user, unless its icy or snow, this is not a problem.
4) When its freezing, take the battery into the house, but only charge it, on a surface that will not burn etc., when you are home. Have a smoke detector near to the battery. I myself have never had one catch fire, but others have.
5) If you are not a fully qualified electrician, never play about with batteries, keep everything the way it was delivered. Tying to run two batteries together can cause some nasty fires for the uninitiated!
This bike on YouTube has two batteries, one on the downtube, one on the carrier, look what happened:-
6) Always treat batteries as if they are sticks of dynamite......
best wishes
Andy
PS. A full discharge should be automatically prevented by the Battery BMS, and it should cut power to the motor at a safe voltage level. A true full discharge would damage the battery, even if brand new.