Hello all! I'm new to this forum and totally new to electric bikes so please bear with me. I'm a retired electronics engineer who's into cycling. I offered to help a friend with her Jorvick trike which she uses because she's unable to walk without support. I don't know the model or year but I suspect it's maybe five+ years old. Mechanically it's pretty horrible and electrically it seems to use generic Chinese components. She tells me that it's had a new motor and I'm guessing that the display and controller will have been changed at the same time. The battery is original and everything went fine for a few months after the replacements. The fault now is that the thing doesn't turn on reliably. Sometimes it does, and it works every time, so it's difficult to demonstrate the fault. Other times it constantly fails. It doesn't give her any confidence to use the trike because if it fails (eg when going shopping alone) then she's stuck.
So... I inspected the battery connections and all electrical connections. They all seem sound. The battery voltage off load seems reasonable at around 41-42V after charging (it's a 36V battery). I tested the interlock switch on the battery off the trike, first with a 10k resistor and then with a filled mains kettle as a load (about 28 Ohms). The switch is fine. After putting the battery on the bike and disconnecting the power cable I noticed a crackle and flash when reconnecting it. That made me wonder if it was an inrush problem. I'm presuming the controller must have a large capacitor on the supply side. To test the inrush theory I made an inductor from a coiled 30m 3-core mains cable so effectively a coil of 90m wire between the battery and the controller. It might be the inductance or it might be the resistance but that worked! Every time I plug the battery in now with the coil connected the trike powers up. I reckon I have an inrush problem that is sometimes triggering the BMS in the battery to shut down. Is this likely to be because the cells are decaying? (The trike has never been heavily used.) Or could the BMS be tired? Or should there be an inrush limiter in the circuit? I haven't found any commercial inrush components for use with e-bikes so I have some 5 Ohm 20mm thermistors on order. They can each handle 7A continuous, so I reckon that three in parallel should be good enough for the likely motor loads, and I'm hoping the resistance (1.67 Ohms) will be enough to reduce the inrush at turn-on.
Do you think I'm on the right track? I'm trying to avoid my friend having to buy a new battery because of the cost - but maybe it will be inevitable if the existing one is gradually dying. I also don't want her to buy one if it's not that. I don't know anyone locally with a similar battery I could just try for a few minutes. I would welcome the thoughts of someone with experience of these kind of things. Ta.
So... I inspected the battery connections and all electrical connections. They all seem sound. The battery voltage off load seems reasonable at around 41-42V after charging (it's a 36V battery). I tested the interlock switch on the battery off the trike, first with a 10k resistor and then with a filled mains kettle as a load (about 28 Ohms). The switch is fine. After putting the battery on the bike and disconnecting the power cable I noticed a crackle and flash when reconnecting it. That made me wonder if it was an inrush problem. I'm presuming the controller must have a large capacitor on the supply side. To test the inrush theory I made an inductor from a coiled 30m 3-core mains cable so effectively a coil of 90m wire between the battery and the controller. It might be the inductance or it might be the resistance but that worked! Every time I plug the battery in now with the coil connected the trike powers up. I reckon I have an inrush problem that is sometimes triggering the BMS in the battery to shut down. Is this likely to be because the cells are decaying? (The trike has never been heavily used.) Or could the BMS be tired? Or should there be an inrush limiter in the circuit? I haven't found any commercial inrush components for use with e-bikes so I have some 5 Ohm 20mm thermistors on order. They can each handle 7A continuous, so I reckon that three in parallel should be good enough for the likely motor loads, and I'm hoping the resistance (1.67 Ohms) will be enough to reduce the inrush at turn-on.
Do you think I'm on the right track? I'm trying to avoid my friend having to buy a new battery because of the cost - but maybe it will be inevitable if the existing one is gradually dying. I also don't want her to buy one if it's not that. I don't know anyone locally with a similar battery I could just try for a few minutes. I would welcome the thoughts of someone with experience of these kind of things. Ta.