Yes it's possible with a sine wave inveter you will need a large lesuire type battery if your battery is big enough you may get a couple of charges out of the battery..Is it possible to charge a bike from an invertor via a car battery?
Specifically the focus Jam .
We have no 240v in the garage.
Not possible on the Jam without motor removal unfortunately.Take battery out and charge in house?
WTF, you keep your bike in the garage, that's what lounge rooms are for! ?Is it possible to charge a bike from an invertor via a car battery?
Specifically the focus Jam .
We have no 240v in the garage.
Worth looking at a portable solar panel and inverter so you can charge it if you're camping.Is it possible to charge a bike from an invertor via a car battery?
Specifically the focus Jam .
We have no 240v in the garage.
Neither option is feasible unfortunately as the garage in question is a communal one underground an apartment block .Run power out to your garage?
You will monster through a leisure battery charging a bike, and carrying it into the house to charge will be hassle. For a few hundred quid you could buy a few leisure batteries, wire them in parallel, and fit a couple of solar panels on the roof with a mppt controller. Has the advantage you could fit some 12v led lights for your garage too.
Braking regen at best delivers 5% extra range on an e bike and it means the motor needs to be gearless direct drive.....so no freewheel! Thats why it is not a feature of mid drive e bikes.bikes should generate their own power when braking and using suspension travel...just saying.
Braking regen at best delivers 5% extra range on an e bike and it means the motor needs to be gearless direct drive.....so no freewheel! Thats why it is not a feature of mid drive e bikes.
Yes, I agree! And power is free anyway, just wire a lamp to a solar panel, and presto... infinite free light and power!bikes should generate their own power when braking and using suspension travel...just saying.
Braking (discs) has nothing to do with the engine.
I think you mean engine-braking.
At the start of a downhill run I attach a hook to a tree which is connected to a 200m titanium cable which is wound round the kers flywheel.
How would it work just with discs?Braking (discs) has nothing to do with the engine.
I think you mean engine-braking.
How would it work just with discs?
I'm sure that breaking power can generate electrical power also (with different components ofcourse)
The suspension travel can also generate electrical power.
No one disagrees with you. It would be great if these things existed now .. in the future maybe. For now, if you look at a dynamo for your bike to run a light, it's big, heavy, inefficient and just runs a little light. That's nothing compared to the power needed to re-charge the battery to power the motor.I think you think too narrow
You know what you know...but not what will be invented tomorrow out of the blue.
Just like the tablet....suddently it was there with absolutely no need.
eMTB is a great platform for developments...just lets see how smart our bikes will be in a few years.
Is it possible to charge a bike from an invertor via a car battery?
Specifically the focus Jam .
We have no 240v in the garage.
charging from the van when camping isWorth looking at a portable solar panel and inverter so you can charge it if you're camping.
ive wired a few splitchargers in the past and have more than a few spare batteries lying around so this is s good suggestion .I was hoping with all the "bumps" the thread would have attracted the brighter minds to come up with a cool solution for you ... unfortunately they must all be out on their bikes or have their hands full .... So I'll have to stop being a knob for 5 minutes and try ...
So, ok, yes, you could charge it from your car using an inverter. You just run the risk of flattening the car battery, which does the battery no good and means you can't start the car. You probably have more chance if it's a diesel as the battery is normally bigger to provide the extra ooomp to turn a higher compression diesel engine. You'd need to check what the capacity of the car battery is before you start and compare that to your bike. Your focus battery is 10.5 ah and you'll use more than that to charge it due to energy loss with the inverter and the transformer for the charger.
So you could try it, but buy a jump start unit as backup incase you need to jump the car . like :
If you were doing it long term, you could setup a second leisure battery in the boot and have that added to your charging circuit as you would on a motorhome or similar - then you could use that battery without fear of flattening and damaging your main battery.
Your focus battery is 10.5 ah
That’s what I thought, it would make things easier for sure.So give yourself a margin over that for energy loss in conversion , say 20%,through the inverter and transformer and you should have a rough idea of which of your batteries is suitable for a couple of charges.
It's a shame focus don't sell a 12v charger as you're converting 12v DC to 220v AC back to low voltage DC ? so lots of wasted energy to heat.
Seems to me the easiest and fastest way to charge the battery off grid is with a suitcase generator.
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