Battery range on 500wh not what I was hoping

dobbyhasfriends

🌹Old Bloke 🎸
Subscriber
Sep 19, 2019
3,254
4,642
Llandovery, Wales
picked up my Levo yesterday and took it out today, its a 2019 carbon comp (500wh)
done 24 miles and 800m of climbing, used eco and trail only with a few road sections with the motor off.
the battery was completely gone when I got back. The beacons is quite rough though, lots of it was baby head long grass..
is this normal range? I was expecting more..
are my settings to blame?

all that aside, what an amazing bike ! I was still riding my old enduro until today but thats probably the last time it gets a turn of the wheel..

IMG_0828.JPG


IMG_0851.JPG
 

s90gav

New Member
May 7, 2019
10
18
Durham, UK
Ive got a 2019 Kenevo with the 500wh battery and most ive got is 31.5miles and 5400ft climbing and that was in eco 98% of the time and i finished the ride with bout 10% battery left
 

RoedeOrm

Member
Aug 25, 2019
12
11
Germany
This illustrates how different the energy consumption can be. And how difficult to compare. If I would use my Levo like my Motocrossbike I would expect to run out of "fuel" after an hour riding or so.
 

dobbyhasfriends

🌹Old Bloke 🎸
Subscriber
Sep 19, 2019
3,254
4,642
Llandovery, Wales
Climbing the mode you are in and very importantly your weight can make big difference as well. Also how you ride if all in high gears with slow cadence then more battery power is used.

This was my first ride on an ebike of any kind.
I have to admit that on a normal bike im more of a grinder than a spinner and I found it difficult to get used to the power delivery at first. after a while I learned the kind of modulation you have to do up slippery climbs etc and made a few changes to the power settings to lower the outputs.

so I have had to change the way I ride already with pedal power modulation.. my body position has had to change as well, the way I move around on the bike had to change..

Im also 95kg without kit, I usually take a camelbak with 2-3 litres of water plus some tools so im well over 100kg when riding..

overall I loved it, I laughed like an emptying drain on the first long climb.. fantastic
 

outerlimits

E*POWAH BOSS
Founding Member
Feb 3, 2018
1,241
1,575
Australia
In Turbo 100%, I’ll get 18 miles and 600m climbing from a 460wh battery. That’s spinning 70rpm average hauling 110kg.
Cadence, weight, tyres, tyre pressure, trail surface and weather all play a part in your power consumption.
 

Flatslide

E*POWAH Master
Jul 14, 2019
265
250
Dunedin NZ
Screenshot_20191103-133909_Ebikemotion.jpg
Screenshot_20191103-133922_Ebikemotion.jpg


Different bike to yours entirely, but this is a ride over the top of a local hill and back on a 25°C day. I weigh just under 90kg geared up. Bike is Powerplay Altitude. 60% of this was road (tarmac and metal), and mode was mostly Trail-60% assist. Not sure why the app didn't record the cadence.
 

Im also 95kg without kit, I usually take a camelbak with 2-3 litres of water plus some tools so im well over 100kg when riding..

overall I loved it, I laughed like an emptying drain on the first long climb.. fantastic
I'm a similar weight, and I was really disappointed with the 500wh battery. I was getting around 35km and about 1200m of climbing. Got the larger battery and I haven't drained it yet.

I had problems pretty early on with my 500wh battery, and it needed replacing after only a month (got a 700wh replacement instead)... I wonder whether there's an issue with a batch of the 2019 batteries??
 

Rusty

E*POWAH BOSS
Jul 17, 2019
1,513
1,673
New Zealand
With my 504Wh battery around Rotovegas I was getting a little over 40km with around 620m climbing. That is mostly in Eco with maybe 2km use of Trail dispersed between 10 or so chort climbs.
Haven't had a chance to ride that loop since I got the 700Wh but on the Waikato River Trail I was dialled back to 15/25 and 30/50 - after 75km & 1285m climbing I still had 12% battery remaining. Again mostly Eco with Trail on some climbs - maybe 3km. I did use Turbo 3 or 4 times for perhaps 250-300m. On the same trail riding my Scott with the Shimano e8000 and 504Wh I got around 43-45km before flat.
 

Basy

Member
Mar 23, 2018
89
79
Australia
I finished the Epic at Mt Buller (Australia) on one Shimano 500wh battery. Zero bars by the time I got back to the carpark at the bottom. Trip was about 45km's with fair bit of climbing before the final decent. I was probably about 110kg's kitted up at the time and super unfit but used eco 90% of the way.

epic.png
 

CjP

PRIME TIME
Subscriber
Jan 1, 2019
1,671
2,394
Everywhere
I finished the Epic at Mt Buller (Australia) on one Shimano 500wh battery. Zero bars by the time I got back to the carpark at the bottom. Trip was about 45km's with fair bit of climbing before the final decent. I was probably about 110kg's kitted up at the time and super unfit but used eco 90% of the way.

View attachment 21354
I done the epic trail on my 2019 Kenevo and got back with 26%.
How good was the Epic trail!
 

davarello

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2018
305
360
New Zealand
For me the keys to maximum range on my Levo are turning down the ECO so it basically accounts for the weight of the bike (20% in my case) and making sure when climbing I use all the low gears before increasing the assistance on steeper bits. However if it's just a short ride, I'm more likely to put it in Trail most of the ride with spurts of Turbo for fun.
 

Chubba

Active member
Sep 17, 2019
71
108
Cape Town, South Africa
picked up my Levo yesterday and took it out today, its a 2019 carbon comp (500wh)
done 24 miles and 800m of climbing, used eco and trail only with a few road sections with the motor off.
the battery was completely gone when I got back. The beacons is quite rough though, lots of it was baby head long grass..
is this normal range? I was expecting more..
are my settings to blame?

all that aside, what an amazing bike ! I was still riding my old enduro until today but thats probably the last time it gets a turn of the wheel..
what settings are you using?

It doesn't sound right in my opinion, you should be getting at least 1200m - 1500m on a ride and between 45-55kms.

My mate is 115kg on a 2019 Turbo Levo with 500w and that what he gets. Example below of a ride we did a few weeks back and he used eco most and trail a bit.

1573197185851.png


1573196876926.png
 

galaga187

E*POWAH Master
Apr 15, 2018
804
602
Wroughton
This was my first ride on an ebike of any kind.
I have to admit that on a normal bike im more of a grinder than a spinner and I found it difficult to get used to the power delivery at first. after a while I learned the kind of modulation you have to do up slippery climbs etc and made a few changes to the power settings to lower the outputs.

so I have had to change the way I ride already with pedal power modulation.. my body position has had to change as well, the way I move around on the bike had to change..

Im also 95kg without kit, I usually take a camelbak with 2-3 litres of water plus some tools so im well over 100kg when riding..

overall I loved it, I laughed like an emptying drain on the first long climb.. fantastic
I’m similar weight but now getting longer distances I did one on Exmoor 32 miles 1000+m battery finished 10%. I was riding with friends on clockwork bikes so had the motor off for flat trails once moving and tuned assistance down on eco 15% and trail 27% for climbs. You will get better at getting more out of the battery as you get used to the bike.
 

apac

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Aug 14, 2019
1,326
1,173
S.Wales
@dobbyhasfriends do a few cycles of the battery before concluding what range you are getting. I also find that cold weather affects the amount of capacity you get out of lithium cells of this type, and im sure its not that warm on the Beacons right now. Anyway, 24 miles sounds pretty good to me.
 
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JCB

Member
Oct 7, 2019
24
24
Burnie, Tasmania
I am disappointed with the range of my 500wh battery also. Already ran out on 2 rides after 2h. I am told I need to ride in Eco most of the time, but the bike feels heavy in Eco, not fun.
I can't wait for the new Shimano battery, hopefully 700wh+
 

Zimmerframe

MUPPET
Subscriber
Jun 12, 2019
13,998
20,749
Brittany, France
When I first started looking at getting an electric bike I wondered if it would, in the real world, actually have enough power to get up a single hill. I tried to imagine if I got one of my cordless drills and used it to drive a pulley and lift a 100kg weight, how far would it lift it .. probably not that far .. but with 5 or 6 batteries .. uhm .... yes, maybe a whole hill ...

So when I got the first one and found that, as I plodded around like a petrified granny, it would almost go 100km's - I was quite surprised.

As I got faster and rode harder, the range became less and less ..

Now I have a Kenevo and I sulk because I can only go 29km's and 1200m climb on Turbo ...
 

CjP

PRIME TIME
Subscriber
Jan 1, 2019
1,671
2,394
Everywhere
When I first started looking at getting an electric bike I wondered if it would, in the real world, actually have enough power to get up a single hill. I tried to imagine if I got one of my cordless drills and used it to drive a pulley and lift a 100kg weight, how far would it lift it .. probably not that far .. but with 5 or 6 batteries .. uhm .... yes, maybe a whole hill ...

So when I got the first one and found that, as I plodded around like a petrified granny, it would almost go 100km's - I was quite surprised.

As I got faster and rode harder, the range became less and less ..

Now I have a Kenevo and I sulk because I can only go 29km's and 1200m climb on Turbo ...
Glutton!
 

dobbyhasfriends

🌹Old Bloke 🎸
Subscriber
Sep 19, 2019
3,254
4,642
Llandovery, Wales
what settings are you using?

It doesn't sound right in my opinion, you should be getting at least 1200m - 1500m on a ride and between 45-55kms.

My mate is 115kg on a 2019 Turbo Levo with 500w and that what he gets. Example below of a ride we did a few weeks back and he used eco most and trail a bit.

View attachment 21362

View attachment 21359
I was changing my settings throughout the ride as I found that - especially on trail mode, it was too much assist and on some occasions I felt that the bike was driving me along and not the other way around.. in fact, because ive always used clipless pedals and race shoes but converted to flats for this bike, i found that the impetus of the bike was catching me out and I would lose a foot from the pedal pretty frequently.

from memory:

ECO: 25-45
Trail: 45-80
Turbo: 100-100
 

Zimmerframe

MUPPET
Subscriber
Jun 12, 2019
13,998
20,749
Brittany, France
Don’t ever change Zimmer

I might when I have my xmas shower .. Talking of which it's almost time to go and get completely soaked and covered in mud. It's 4c degrees - so perfect for keeping those brake disks cold for some ScReAM testing .. Would be a lot more fun if it was snow and not rain .. and a good time to test Spesh cold weather battery performance !
 

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