Mizanur Rahman death: Coroner calls for e-bike battery standards
The recommendations come after Mizanur Rahman, 41, died following a fire caused by a faulty battery.
www.bbc.co.uk
And its so easy to get advice on how to do that."The battery,(...) was found to have been heavily modified, including a retro-fitted additional battery cage and motor."
Whoever said that is probably not technical and didn't understand the actual cause of the fire. All that means is that the bike had two separate kits fitted - either front and rear motors or mid-drive and rear motor. That isn't something that is more likely to cause a fire than two ebikes parked next to each other."The battery,(...) was found to have been heavily modified, including a retro-fitted additional battery cage and motor."
Modifying things correctly and with understanding isn't unsafe. The problems come when people do it incorrectly without understanding. That's why it's important to give advice. If we don't give it, they might just decide to experiment, which could cost lives!And its so easy to get advice on how to do that.
Each time when I see news like this I ask myself a question if person involved was a member of this forum and what advice did he get.And its so easy to get advice on how to do that.
If that was the cause of the problem, you can see why the Coroner might call for standardisation of connectors. It would make sense to have foolproof methods, where if you have the wrong voltage, it doesn't fit, like a different size connector for each different voltage.From the linked article
Mr Smith wrote there was a risk of a "catastrophic failure" when a lithium ion battery was plugged into a charger with a different voltage rating.
Good point, well presented.I still wonder when differing voltages are mentioned if even the so called experts don't know or understand the volltage ratings, for instance a charger for a 36v will often have thr 42v max charge rating .
There are intelligent chargers. All the expensive bikes have them. Bosch chargers cost from £80 to £150, Yamaha is £100 to £160 and Carrera ones are £60. A typical Chinese dumb charger is around £10.I'm surprised chargers which automatically recognise battery voltage, BMS continuity etc are not widely available. All the chargers (Some quite ancient) I use for my toy planes have this facility and confirm pack voltage and balance connection status before charging. Any cell over volt etc during charging automatically terminates the charging cycle.
TTFN
John.
When the battery is operating in the bike, you need at least two control functions: Overcurrent protection in case of short; and low voltage protection to stop the battery over-draining. There are some bikes that have regeneration, so they need over-voltage protection too.I'm sure there is a logical reason, but one thing which surprised me when I bought my 1st E-Bike (Assuming I understand correctly) was the BMS was in the battery not the charger. I appreciate the extra up front cost of an intelligent charger but as it would be expected to be a one time purchase whereas batteries are by their nature "Consumables" it can't be the cost?
TTFN
John.
This. For cell protection to be reliable it must be inside the battery, not reliant on user training or on protocols like plug shapes or stickers. Which is not to say that those can't improve safety.The missing standard is requiring the battery to be resilient to a wrong voltage charger.