i put a cell in the freezer over night and it did lose a bit from fully charged.That's handy for winter riding. It sort of puts the kibosh on those that say a battery loses performance in the winter.
0.02v is all it lost
i put a cell in the freezer over night and it did lose a bit from fully charged.That's handy for winter riding. It sort of puts the kibosh on those that say a battery loses performance in the winter.
Keep practising. Soon you'll be able to use a roadbike like me and do 0 Wh/mile, which saves a lot of messing about. No battery range anxiety either. Wind is also easier to deal with.I average about 4wh/mile on the Gtech, proved it's worth again today riding into a hellish head wind..
Self discharge is not the effect of a cold cell, but it is a good indicator of a problematic cell, regardless of temperature. 0.02V is certainly nothing to worry about though.i put a cell in the freezer over night and it did lose a bit from fully charged.
0.02v is all it lost
You answered the question yourself. Batteries have internal resistance. As soon as you start using them, they warm up, so the ambient temperature doesn't make much difference.S
I'm not sure why d8veh suggests that the idea of capacity loss of a cold battery is spurious as it is a widely understood property of all battery chemistries. I might have misunderstood what his point was though (possibly about the self-heating of cells), so I'm sure he'll be able to expand further if he feels he should or wants to.
That's certainly a good point regarding the usage pattern of car batteries being different to that of ebike batteries, but the rest doesn't match my experience.You answered the question yourself. Batteries have internal resistance. As soon as you start using them, they warm up, so the ambient temperature doesn't make much difference.
Ebike batteries are not the same as car batteries. Car batteries only discharge for a few seconds when using the starter motor, which doesn't give them enough time to heat up. After that, all the electrical power comes from the alternator. Ebike batteries give more or less continuous power until empty. How much they heat up depends on how much current you draw.
The good 18650s have an internal resistance of 50 milliohms. Lets say that an ebike averages about 4 amps (160w). The heat generated would be 0.8 watts per cell, which is 32 watts for a 40 cell battery. That's enough to gradually warm it up. When you go up a hill and use, say 10 amps or more, the heating would be 5w per cell and 200w total, which is substantial. That would be if it stayed cold, but actually, the internal resistance would go down when it warms up, so actual heat would be less.
Therefore, if your bike feels sluggish because you left it out in the cold, just run full power for a couple of minutes and then your battery will come to life.
I haven't got a cell thermometer but I have touched my battery after a hard climb:My experience is with LiPo though, so perhaps the relatively low IR in either scenario (warm or cold) made little difference to cell temperature compared to other cells with lower C rates.
Now there is a new invention to patent: "object serving to make a cup of tea while you ride" Or "water cooling mechanism for e-bike battery". Soon all those integrated down tube batteries will need external cooling fins, that will play havoc with your Cx ratio!I was just looking at the spec sheet for Samsung 30Q cells. During the 10 amp discharge test, they heat up to 100 deg C!
I've done 30 years of "normal" bikes, the ebike is a treat for the daily commute..Keep practising. Soon you'll be able to use a roadbike like me and do 0 Wh/mile, which saves a lot of messing about. No battery range anxiety either. Wind is also easier to deal with.
I find that the effort to pedal my roadbike is the same as my (very efficient) electric bike on the lowest level of assist, which is about 60w. That's at the same speed and on the same hills. 60w at 4mph is 4 wh per mile, so that's the cross-over point, when a road-bike would be a more logical choice.I average about 4wh/mile on the Gtech, proved it's worth again today riding into a hellish head wind..
Get yourself on of these, or two if you want front carrying capabilities too!Hi Dave, I was interested that your bike seemed to have both a rear rack and rear suspension. That would be much kinder to the rear wheel/spokes than a hard tail.
I am also 100kg ish and carry heavy panniers on a rear rack and on my first electric assisted bike the Oxygen emate city that I used on rougher tracks than I should have this led to broken spokes.
On my sDuro yamaha Haibike I had a stronger rear wheel built to solve the problem.
I would love a good design for an off road commuter like me that allowed the combination of a full suspension mountain bike set up and a rear pannier rack.