Hello,
Firstly, I tried to post this in Technical but it said I didn't have the rights so if anyone can help me out there then that would be great.
Now, I've got a Team Hybrid Viper which attaches to a wheelchair and forms an electric tricycle. Mine uses a SAFT VH battery module along with a Heinzmann RN, I think thats the motor anyways.
The battery has its own indicator built into it and the 80-100% light hasn't been lighting up after charging, I rang Team Hybrid and they advised me to run the battery down and re-charge - and to do this several times.
However, that would mean me doing nearly circuit of my city's boundaries which I don't have time for. So I attached the viper to mobility hoist and hoisted it up into the air, I've put the battery in and taped the throttle over so it would run the battery down.
But the battery still hasn't gone down a light; so, 1) is this not enough to run the battery down, does it need the traction of going along? and 2) am i damaging the motor by not giving it traction and letting it spin round for 60-80 miles in 1 go (bare in mind its in the air).
Any suggestions would be great because i use this as my only way of getting around uni and I've already lost power at the bottom end of my campus resulting in people having to push all the way back.
thanks,
Greg
Firstly, I tried to post this in Technical but it said I didn't have the rights so if anyone can help me out there then that would be great.
Now, I've got a Team Hybrid Viper which attaches to a wheelchair and forms an electric tricycle. Mine uses a SAFT VH battery module along with a Heinzmann RN, I think thats the motor anyways.
The battery has its own indicator built into it and the 80-100% light hasn't been lighting up after charging, I rang Team Hybrid and they advised me to run the battery down and re-charge - and to do this several times.
However, that would mean me doing nearly circuit of my city's boundaries which I don't have time for. So I attached the viper to mobility hoist and hoisted it up into the air, I've put the battery in and taped the throttle over so it would run the battery down.
But the battery still hasn't gone down a light; so, 1) is this not enough to run the battery down, does it need the traction of going along? and 2) am i damaging the motor by not giving it traction and letting it spin round for 60-80 miles in 1 go (bare in mind its in the air).
Any suggestions would be great because i use this as my only way of getting around uni and I've already lost power at the bottom end of my campus resulting in people having to push all the way back.
thanks,
Greg