I bought a Haibike sDuro HardSeven Yamaha in 2015. It has a 400Wh battery. I use it to commute to work and back. Yesterday I rode 14 miles cross country and used 31% of the battery giving a theoretical range of 45 miles, charged the battery back up at work and then rode 10 miles on the road home using 38% of the battery giving a theoretical range of 26 miles. Riding home I want to travel faster and use higher levels of assistance on the hills I climb. My bike assists above the cut off point and I average around 20mph for the 10 mile road ride home.
My cross country route is really what I bought the bike for and is nearly all off road including some quite challenging bits where I use lowest assist level eco of the three I have or motor off. I have a pannier rack and carry two fully loaded panniers with stuff I need for work. I also weigh over 100kg.
My total mileage as of last nights return trip is 10,468 miles.
This is the original battery that will be four years old in March and the amount of battery I use has hardly changed at all since I bought the bike.
I always bring the battery into the house and leave it at the 60% charge level it has reduced to on the ride home until I need to use the bike again. This can include not being used for three weeks if I go on a main family holiday and recently six weeks as I had a minor operation and was told not to ride.
I try to charge the battery back to full as close to my departure time for work as possible. I am lucky to be able to leave my bike in a heated room at work where I can also charge the battery back to full.
However I have to leave the battery charger attached as I am generally away from the room where I charge the bike until the end of my shift of around 9 hours. The Yamaha charger does appear to switch of (ie light goes out) when the battery is fully charged. I am sure that my battery is starting to lose some of its capacity but in real terms works pretty much as well as it did when new.
I also have an old 2011 (still going strong 20,000 miles plus) Oxygen battery behind the seat post rear hub drive bike that I use for shopping and many other errands and due to the battery being much more difficult to remove it stays on the bike in the garage. It has a cheap Chinese charger. The batteries seem to last about three years. The last battery I bought was under £200 from ebay including charger https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/36V15-6Ah-Lithium-ion-Battery-E-bike-Silver-fish-with-Cellphone-charging-USB/222214730187 . I do use a timer plug in the garage to limit how long the charger stays on. I do use it to ride to work (20 mile round trip charged at work) on early shifts where I am riding on the road in both directions. I do not use a timer plug at work (though I might consider doing this) and the charger keeps charging the battery until I disconnect it to ride home.
So I do not think you need loads of technical knowledge to look after your battery. If possible remove your battery and store it in the house (but do not worry too much if you cannot). Do not fully charge the battery and then not use it. If you have a cheaper Chinese style charger limit the time it continues to charge the battery with a simple timer plug. Try to charge your battery to full as close to when you intend to use it as possible. Store it for longer periods at about half full. As these batteries slowly degrade over time anyway ride your bike as much as possible.
Happy riding.
PS I think torque sensor crank drives are probably a bit kinder to a battery than cadence and in my case full throttle controlled hub motor bikes, but I really like them both for different reasons.
My cross country route is really what I bought the bike for and is nearly all off road including some quite challenging bits where I use lowest assist level eco of the three I have or motor off. I have a pannier rack and carry two fully loaded panniers with stuff I need for work. I also weigh over 100kg.
My total mileage as of last nights return trip is 10,468 miles.
This is the original battery that will be four years old in March and the amount of battery I use has hardly changed at all since I bought the bike.
I always bring the battery into the house and leave it at the 60% charge level it has reduced to on the ride home until I need to use the bike again. This can include not being used for three weeks if I go on a main family holiday and recently six weeks as I had a minor operation and was told not to ride.
I try to charge the battery back to full as close to my departure time for work as possible. I am lucky to be able to leave my bike in a heated room at work where I can also charge the battery back to full.
However I have to leave the battery charger attached as I am generally away from the room where I charge the bike until the end of my shift of around 9 hours. The Yamaha charger does appear to switch of (ie light goes out) when the battery is fully charged. I am sure that my battery is starting to lose some of its capacity but in real terms works pretty much as well as it did when new.
I also have an old 2011 (still going strong 20,000 miles plus) Oxygen battery behind the seat post rear hub drive bike that I use for shopping and many other errands and due to the battery being much more difficult to remove it stays on the bike in the garage. It has a cheap Chinese charger. The batteries seem to last about three years. The last battery I bought was under £200 from ebay including charger https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/36V15-6Ah-Lithium-ion-Battery-E-bike-Silver-fish-with-Cellphone-charging-USB/222214730187 . I do use a timer plug in the garage to limit how long the charger stays on. I do use it to ride to work (20 mile round trip charged at work) on early shifts where I am riding on the road in both directions. I do not use a timer plug at work (though I might consider doing this) and the charger keeps charging the battery until I disconnect it to ride home.
So I do not think you need loads of technical knowledge to look after your battery. If possible remove your battery and store it in the house (but do not worry too much if you cannot). Do not fully charge the battery and then not use it. If you have a cheaper Chinese style charger limit the time it continues to charge the battery with a simple timer plug. Try to charge your battery to full as close to when you intend to use it as possible. Store it for longer periods at about half full. As these batteries slowly degrade over time anyway ride your bike as much as possible.
Happy riding.
PS I think torque sensor crank drives are probably a bit kinder to a battery than cadence and in my case full throttle controlled hub motor bikes, but I really like them both for different reasons.
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