Dangerous e-bike chargers found on Amazon and eBay
The products have since been removed from sale after an investigation by a consumer safety charity.
www.bbc.co.uk
Of course, but it seems that a number of eBike chargers were found with dangerous plugs. So take care is buying an eBike charger off eBay etc.I read it but it seems to be aimed at the plugs not being up to UK standard. So its not really an ebike thing at all, it could apply to any imported electrical product.
I have one that looks similar to the smaller one in the picture. It was supplied with a Swytch kit for my Bromtoon.You can see the size difference to a typical SANS 2A charger.
Would be interested to know the voltage it gives out, if you have an accurate multimeter.I have one that looks similar to the smaller one in the picture. It was supplied with a Swytch kit for my Bromtoon.
Its gets too hot really, not dangerous melty hot, but too hot for long term relaibility. It ought to have a fan.
42.67v off load, measured with a Fluke 87V, 41.9V on an Avo8MkVWould be interested to know the voltage it gives out, if you have an accurate multimeter.
So one gives an ok result, one too high...Which one do you believe has the best calibration?42.67v off load, measured with a Fluke 87V, 41.9V on an Avo8MkV
The Fluke, but thats digital so effectivly open circuit, so the charger output might be a little high.So one gives an ok result, one too high...Which one do you believe has the best calibration?
The Fluke, but thats digital so effectivly open circuit, so the charger output might be a little high.
The Avo8 is an old style moving coil job and circa 50 years old, but puts a small load on the charger.
My other two digital meters, HP-90EPC 42.7v, OWON B35T 42.6V
It could do.Would you expect a load under the rated output current to make any difference?
> The charity looked at the mains plugs in the charging devices and said that all were so visually substandard that no test purchasing was necessary.Dangerous e-bike chargers found on Amazon and eBay
The products have since been removed from sale after an investigation by a consumer safety charity.www.bbc.co.uk
It could do.
What you really need to do, rather than measure the open circuit voltage of the charger, is to measure at the time full charge is attained;
The voltage of the battery.
The output voltage of the charger whilst its still attached to the battery.
It appears that my Swytch charger is charging the battery to circa 42.64.What would be interesting is what voltage you measure with a 42.6V charger as the battery reaches full charge.
It appears that my Swytch charger is charging the battery to circa 42.64.
However a silicon diode in series with the charge lead does seem to charge the battery OK and then the voltage on the battery side is 42V.
Should be out on it later today, when I recharge it I will check it full charges with the diode in place.
Dont know yet, but one thought occurs to me.Does the diode drop work ok? I tried that trick with my cheap PSUs, but found it would send the voltage reading all over the place...but I did not measure under load, just OCV.
In what way?I wonder if they were all plug type chargers? 36v x 2amps is quite a bit for a small charger.