Bike Gorilla
Member
Looking at doing this for topping up when driving to different destinations. Don't understand what I would need (voltages etc.) and electric is like voodoo to me!
Looks great £299 though..... might as well buy a second battery maybeI use one of these (along with my 56V batteries from my lawnmower, chainsaw, trimmer, snow blower, and hedge trimmer) to power a E6002 Shimano charger so I can charge anywhere. Works great.
Power+ Nexus Escape (150W Power Inverter)
Built tough with a 120V AC power outlet & 2 USB ports. Use any EGO battery to power the Escape. Battery sold separately.egopowerplus.com
Looks great £299 though..... might as well buy a second battery maybe
Have a link?Yikes. Only $99 here in the US (since I already have the batteries from my tools).
Interesting I’d be interested in knowing how to power batteries too, is solar an option or is there just a nice low maintenance boat battery or something capable? Like if a fast charge is 6A then I think that’s like 120 watts required from solar or something else resulting in 50% charge in an hour right?
I could be talking out of my ass though...
THanks everyone, it does sound harder than just plugging an inverter in to my cigarette lighter! The last thing I want to do is damage the battery too. I'll maybe leave it for now. I don't often feel like riding after I've gone through the battery anyway!
So for us mere mortals who haven’t the foggiest how much would it cost to own the right battery abd be able to charge the bikes?
Thanks. I was thinking more of charging while driving, so while the engine is running. So I think an inverter will do the trick.
the question now is, which one!? Appreciate any UK links to some contenders
Ah, right A gennie probably isn't the thing for that!
You could gamble on a 'car invertor' that plugs into your accessory socket, but you'd want to make sure the in situ wiring could cope with the demand, or it could get a little smokey or worse on the drive.
I'd put in a dedicated feed from the battery with a voltage sensing relay to switch the feed on when the engine is running. But I'm with @flash in not liking charging high draw things on the car system as it's really only designed for the car and couple of phones etc.
I've got an 800w Victron invertor and 2 100ah leisure batteries in my campervan. This works well, but it's expensive and takes up space.
Maybe get a spare battery and make sure both are charged before you leave!
So for us mere mortals who haven’t the foggiest how much would it cost to own the right battery abd be able to charge the bikes?
If I have the specs of your charger (what it wants for AC input) and how many charges you expect from the system I can give you an idea. But in short you need.
1. Battery. A 100aH AGM leisure battery should be fine for a single recharge. Lithium is a worthy upgrade for capacity, size and weight.
2. Inverter. Matched as closely as possible to the bikes charger.
3 Battery charger. You can recharge either from AC or from the vehicle while you drive. Solar is also possible but more complex.
4. A box to hold it all. Buy one or make your own.
Start at about GBP500 and move up for lithium and more capacity.
Gordon
500 Bosch cheers
Btw, Gordon calculation is actually wrong. You need at least 4A x 36v =144W.
As I mentioned I used 300W to charge using the 6A and it works fine. Cause I only needed 6Ax36v=216W.
Do not use cigarette lighter, not enough. You also need to install inline fuse if you are connecting your inverter directly to the battery. I’ve tested the 300W inverter to charge my Giant battery with 6Ax48v=288W and a 10 gauge wire gets warm, but still acceptable and you need 25A fuse.
Btw, Gordon calculation is actually wrong. You need at least 4A x 36v =144W.
As I mentioned I used 300W to charge using the 6A and it works fine. Cause I only needed 6Ax36v=216W.
Do not use cigarette lighter, not enough. You also need to install inline fuse if you are connecting your inverter directly to the battery. I’ve tested the 300W inverter to charge my Giant battery with 6Ax48v=288W and a 10 gauge wire gets warm, but still acceptable and you need 25A fuse.
Btw, Gordon calculation is actually wrong. You need at least 4A x 36v =144W.
As I mentioned I used 300W to charge using the 6A and it works fine. Cause I only needed 6Ax36v=216W.
Do not use cigarette lighter, not enough. You also need to install inline fuse if you are connecting your inverter directly to the battery. I’ve tested the 300W inverter to charge my Giant battery with 6Ax48v=288W and a 10 gauge wire gets warm, but still acceptable and you need 25A fuse.
That's the output wattage. I think you need to be looking at the charger input.
My shimano is 2.5A input @ 240v, so 600w invertor
With these chargers, it is probably easier to calculate from the output power. Because most of the chargers are designed to work over a range of voltages (100-250V), the current will be the maximum for the lower voltage go maintain the input power. For your example above, it is likley to be 100V x 2.5A, so 250W max, rather than 240V x 2.5A. Hope that makes sense?
They will also over rate the input current for the maximum possible. If you take your charger, for example, it runs at a maximum constant input power of ~85W (I've measured it). What you need to be careful of though is how the invertor is rated. A lot of them are not for continuous load which makes it a little harder to pick out the right one.
My advice (if you're not sure of the calculations) would be to go for a 500W invertor and connect directly to the battery.
Yes that is Tesla Frunk. I just did 3 weeks road trip and always charge in the frunk.What car is that? Looks like a Tesla frunk?
What Giant has a 48v battery?
The problem here is that we're starting to discuss the complexities that most people don't want/need to hear about.
My Shimano charger is listed as 230-240V only (2.5A). Now it may run variable voltage but I can't take that chance when I make calculations. Conservative is good. Two of the three Bosch chargers in the UK/Oz are the same. They specifically mention the variable voltage charger which is the low amp charger. So I assume the 4 Amp charger is 230V only as mentioned in Boch's specs.
I know the 2.5A on my charger is peak. I know I have a 400W inverter that'll do 750W peak so it'll work with that charger. But I can't say that for somthing I find for a hundred quid on Amazon.
You are absolutely correct that the input power specifications for some inverters are for peak power and not continuous power. I have 2 2000W inverters. They run very differently as one is 2000W peak and the other is 2000W continuous. But without running them you wouldn't know because only one lists the difference. The problem is not all inverters list both peak and continuous ( two of mine do out of three.) so for making calculations it's far better to be conservative. The one I found above, under GDB100 was probably quoting peak power. So probably 500-650W continuous. Once you get to the difference between a 500W and 1000W charger the price difference isn't woth the samller one tripping at peak input.
But what's happening now is we're getting into the little details that make it confusing to those who are starting out. I was trying to keep it simple. 100aH battery, 1000 watt inverter. Charger. Go with that and I know it'll work. I can't say that about many cheap 500W inverters. I avoided direct to starter battery charger for a reason. Not all starter batteries can run high current deep discharge. I didn't want to get into cabling, current isolation, DC to DC chargers and smart alternators. I didn't want people stranded at the trailside. Same for solar. Not everyone can/is going to measure output current to work out their system. They just want a simple set up that'll work. Doesn't matter if it's a bit more than they need. As long as it's not less.
A bigger inverter also give room to expand. You never know what you might want to run in the future. Sometimes I take my Nespresso machine....
Gordon
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.