It's all a bit of a farce really, my last cell purchase from our well known EU supplier came taped together in a thin jiffy bag delivered by RM. Safety, protocol, liability, they are just words.
I told them I was returning them because they didn't work.Did you tell them they were faulty lithium ion batteries?
there is incremental improvement.re batteries getting safer?
If a small company wants to sell into Germany, they really shouldn't have too much difficulty with this. Looks like unless you use several tonnes of packaging per year, it is just register and pay 39 euros a year.Do you think I'll find a seller of an ebike from UK that is shipping to Germany? I've contacted some and a few didn't even mention the battery issue but said they are not shipping to Germany because of the German Packaging Act. I googled that law and found this: https://www.lizenzero.de/en/blog/german-packaging-act-in-the-uk-obligations-when-shipping-to-germany/ I didn't know that there is such a thing!
There's no mention of what cells Powabykes use, and it was an old battery purchased in 2014, exploded in 2020:Are batteries getting safer?
I have lithium batteries in so many devices these days without problems, whereas in the early days of vaping I had one explode when being recharged.
The Powabyke lithium batteries i've come across have been a bit unusual,being assembled in a 10S3P config. with no BMS using Sanyo 2000mah cells. AFAIK they remained like this for many years of production, so must have been tested and passed as safe. There are those who refer to BMS's as "battery murder systems" and direct or bulk charge their battery packs. Have a look on ES for more info on this.There's no mention of what cells Powabykes use, and it was an old battery purchased in 2014, exploded in 2020:
Woman, 60, died after battery off bicycle exploded
A woman died in an horrific fire when a battery from her electric bike exploded in her motorhome as it was being charged.www.expressandstar.com
I don't like that they don't accept Paypal for battery purchases:I recently sent a Battery to Jimmy at INSAT for attention . Jimmy does the arrangements and UPS picked up and APC returned it . It is at the Customer`s risk as Carriers won`t insure the Battery . If it goes walkies you lose .
it costs to sell via paypal it is not free so makes sense not to use it on expensive items as a payment option and the best we got for custom batt builders in the uk with a 30k spot welderI don't like that they don't accept Paypal for battery purchases:
"PLEASE NOTE THAT WE DO NOT ACCEPT PAYPAL PAYMENTS FOR THIS ITEM. ANY PAYMENTS RECEIVED BY PAYPAL WILL BE REFUNDED."
it costs to sell via paypal it is not free so makes sense not to use it on expensive items as a payment option and the best we got for custom batt builders in the uk with a 30k spot welder
I too, stopped accepting paypal for two years now.I don't like that they don't accept Paypal for battery purchases:
I can live with paypal protection, it's the issue of fees. I pay very little using my Clover card terminal.I have no boubt their work is of high quality, but I prefer Paypal payment protection to that of credit card... 400 to 800 squids lost in transit, is a lot of AWOL squids.
This must be a recent change to their T&Cs - I had noticed that some sellers of electronic goods had also recently ceased accepting Paypal... but then switched back because buyers prefer it: I do, because I like that Paypal (in my experience) always takes the buyers side in any dispute. To date, with decades of use, I have always been refunded whenever there has been an issue.I too, stopped accepting paypal for two years now.
It's all down to their change of T&Cs. Before, when an order is cancelled, I refund the customer and Paypal refunds me their fees minus 50p. So the cost of cancellation to me is 50p.
Now, they don't refund their fees if I issue a refund. On a bike, that's 3%. Ouch.