1) The bike will be six years old in June
2) The battery is the original 24 Volt 10 Ah Panasonic
3) The bike has done 17146 miles
4) I have been using a DC-DC converter to power LED front and rear lights for the past 18 months
5) The bike is only used on the lowest power setting all the time
I don't use this bike for leisure, it is just a tool to get me to work and back. I ride the same route (20 miles very hilly round trip) most working days.
I mention the above to put the bike's use into context.
The bike has been working well up until two days ago. On my way to work, the first of the three LED lights on the handlebar controller went out at 8 miles, as it always does. When I arrived at work, 2 miles further on, I noticed that both front and rear lights (powered off the bikes battery via the DC-DC converter) were not illuminated. I checked this out at work and discovered that the DC-DC converter was only outputting 2.5 Volts as opposed to 9 Volts. The unloaded battery voltage was about 26 Volts. I assumed that the converter had failed.
On the way home, the bike felt sluggish. Because I use it on low power all the time, the assist is very subtle anyway, but this felt very underpowered, hardly any assist at all, but a there was something there. To my surprise, the bike made it all the way home without any further LEDs going out on the handlebar controller.
Today, I have used the bike again and it definitely has hardly any assist at all. It has done the full 20 miles without any of the 3 handlebar controller LEDs going out. This has never happened before, even when the bike was new nearly 6 years ago.
I experimented on the way home this evening. The assist level is virtually the same in all three assist modes and that is virtually none at all. If I switch the power off, the bike is definitely slightly harder to pedal, so the motor is doing something.
I'm suspicious because this problem coincided with the DC-DC converter failing. I have taken the feed to this off the back of the battery connection pins on the bike and then used an inline fuse in the feed wire to the converter. I am hoping that the failure of the controller has not damaged the motor in some way.
The battery is at an age where it could fail at any time, but I don't know what the symptoms of a failing Panasonic battery are. I've never heard of one of these batteries expiring. I do know that they have a sophisticated BMS so could this be drastically limiting the current available if the cells are giving up?
In a nutshell, the bikes range has suddenly extended by a factor of 3X to 4X, the assist level has suddenly dropped by a factor of 3X to 4X (but there is definitely some assist there), the assist level is the same in all three modes. Outwardly, the controller lights illuminate and operate as they should.
Can anyone give any suggestions regarding what to check? Is there a fuse or anything that could have been damaged by the failing of the DC-DC converter?
Any help appreciated. I'm very fond of my PC and don't want to throw it in a skip just yet.
2) The battery is the original 24 Volt 10 Ah Panasonic
3) The bike has done 17146 miles
4) I have been using a DC-DC converter to power LED front and rear lights for the past 18 months
5) The bike is only used on the lowest power setting all the time
I don't use this bike for leisure, it is just a tool to get me to work and back. I ride the same route (20 miles very hilly round trip) most working days.
I mention the above to put the bike's use into context.
The bike has been working well up until two days ago. On my way to work, the first of the three LED lights on the handlebar controller went out at 8 miles, as it always does. When I arrived at work, 2 miles further on, I noticed that both front and rear lights (powered off the bikes battery via the DC-DC converter) were not illuminated. I checked this out at work and discovered that the DC-DC converter was only outputting 2.5 Volts as opposed to 9 Volts. The unloaded battery voltage was about 26 Volts. I assumed that the converter had failed.
On the way home, the bike felt sluggish. Because I use it on low power all the time, the assist is very subtle anyway, but this felt very underpowered, hardly any assist at all, but a there was something there. To my surprise, the bike made it all the way home without any further LEDs going out on the handlebar controller.
Today, I have used the bike again and it definitely has hardly any assist at all. It has done the full 20 miles without any of the 3 handlebar controller LEDs going out. This has never happened before, even when the bike was new nearly 6 years ago.
I experimented on the way home this evening. The assist level is virtually the same in all three assist modes and that is virtually none at all. If I switch the power off, the bike is definitely slightly harder to pedal, so the motor is doing something.
I'm suspicious because this problem coincided with the DC-DC converter failing. I have taken the feed to this off the back of the battery connection pins on the bike and then used an inline fuse in the feed wire to the converter. I am hoping that the failure of the controller has not damaged the motor in some way.
The battery is at an age where it could fail at any time, but I don't know what the symptoms of a failing Panasonic battery are. I've never heard of one of these batteries expiring. I do know that they have a sophisticated BMS so could this be drastically limiting the current available if the cells are giving up?
In a nutshell, the bikes range has suddenly extended by a factor of 3X to 4X, the assist level has suddenly dropped by a factor of 3X to 4X (but there is definitely some assist there), the assist level is the same in all three modes. Outwardly, the controller lights illuminate and operate as they should.
Can anyone give any suggestions regarding what to check? Is there a fuse or anything that could have been damaged by the failing of the DC-DC converter?
Any help appreciated. I'm very fond of my PC and don't want to throw it in a skip just yet.
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