Due to the fact that the voltage drops with percentage used you will start to lose actual power past say 50% and it will get worse from there. I would suggest you keep the battery more towards the upper end which would mean charging up to 80% after every ride in your case it looks like?hello
does anyone know
I ride 20 kilometers every morning, the battery drops from 80% capacity to 55%
Should you charge after every ride or after two rides?
The battery manager that is built in (BMS) to the battery pack measures each cell voltage and will disconnect when parameters are breached. It also balances the cells with a resistive load if one becomes more than another.This only happens when a cell is above a set voltage, it will not happen at 20% or 80% state of charge so if you want a healthy battery charge to your known maximum on a regular basis The parameters are unknown to us and will be set by the engineer who designed the system. It is best to trust a well known manufacturer with a great warranty.Yes...............all the criterea in the OPs post is backed by science but what we do not always know is how much control is exercised by the BMS in the latest EMTB batteries. For example, preventing discharge below a certain% and not charing to 100%/or preventing further charging when cells get beyond a certain temperature..........then charging again once they have cooled.
We also have no idea what criterea is checked when rating a used battery............quite possibly only that each cell is still operating at a given voltage? A better guide is the range the battery delivers but that is difficult to assess because of all the variables for each ride.
What is known is that lithium cells suffer potential damage when fully charged to 100% and allowed to fully discharge to 0%.......heat being the main reason. Optimum performance of a lithium battery is when it maintains a charge between 30% and 80%.
The only things I would add to the OPs list is to avoid charging to 100% unless a full charge is needed for the next ride. I have a 750w/h battery and only ever charge that to 100% once a month. Most charges are to 85%.
Note that the better EMTB chargers do not charge continuously. They go through cycles of charging often at different rates per cycle and interspersed with cycles of cell balancing.
that assumes the BMS (which is software) is the same programme in every battery built by different manufacturers. Thats very unlikely. The BMS will be more or less sophisticated in different branded batteries...............as will the charger that is supplied with them.The battery manager that is built in (BMS) to the battery pack measures each cell voltage and will disconnect when parameters are breached. It also balances the cells with a resistive load if one becomes more than another.This only happens when a cell is above a set voltage, it will not happen at 20% or 80% state of charge so if you want a healthy battery charge to your known maximum on a regular basis The parameters are unknown to us and will be set by the engineer who designed the system. It is best to trust a well known manufacturer with a great warranty.
While cell balancing seems to be handled by the BMS, are you saying that proper balancing won't happen unless you fully charge the battery? Trying to wrap my head around this.This only happens when a cell is above a set voltage, it will not happen at 20% or 80% state of charge so if you want a healthy battery charge to your known maximum on a regular basis
The battery manager that is built in (BMS) to the battery pack measures each cell voltage and will disconnect when parameters are breached. It also balances the cells with a resistive load if one becomes more than another.This only happens when a cell is above a set voltage, it will not happen at 20% or 80% state of charge so if you want a healthy battery charge to your known maximum on a regular basis The parameters are unknown to us and will be set by the engineer who designed the system. It is best to trust a well known manufacturer with a great warranty.
Yeah, mine's not LFP I don't think. They came after. I don't think I've ever charged my car to 100%. 95% maximum and I jumped straight in and drove it when I took it off charge, so it wasn't at that SOC for long. Doesn't make much sense to go higher than that in a Tesla as you lose regen, so you lose efficiency.@RJUK thats for your car. There are cars with LFP battery, not being impacted with 100%. For LFP you do not care, it can be full all the time. But yes, ebikes are mostly li-ion. LFP batteries can (and should, according to Tesla) be charged to 100% regularly,
Great point! If you're looking to keep your ebike for a very long time, following some best practice to prolong battery life makes a lot of sense. On the other hand, if you're going to replace the bike before the warranty expires, battery care might be less of a concern. Boils down to our individual goals and expectationsIf you think there is value in having a battery that retains more range, long after the warranty is expired, then game the system, pull it off the charger when it's 60-80% full and top it up, if need be, before you ride.
If you follow the extended lifespan routine, you should still charge it 95%-100% before you ride at least every 10-20 rides (or whenever you notice the remaining range is out of whack) to balance the cells and recalibrate the BMS.
While cell balancing seems to be handled by the BMS, are you saying that proper balancing won't happen unless you fully charge the battery? Trying to wrap my head around this.
Should I then leave the charger on the battery overnight for example, meaning charge the battery to 100% and continue charging for 8-10 hours so that balancing can actually take place, and repeat this process from time to time? But avoid doing this all the time so the cells won't be unnecessarily stressed?
Most of all, don't over-think this or get too caught up in trying to take perfect care of your battery. The quality systems out there can handle all the normal situations you throw at it and even the best cared for battery's lifespan is dependent upon manufacturing tolerances of the battery and BMS design and manufacture. The best of them will last nearly forever by using a little care, but all of them will eventually reach the end of life and it's combination of usage patterns and manufacturing tolerances that will determine their eventual fate.
Useful tip and explanation, thanks! I've heard about this before but didn't know the reason behind it.If you return from a hot-weather ride and you have been thrashing on the battery, do not come home and immediately plug it into the charger. Put it in a cool area and let it rest an hour or two before plugging it in. This allows it to cool down and for the cells temperatures to equalize with one another.
Get a smart plug and Google or Alexa.
Then set up a voice command to charge the bike to 70-80% when you get home and another command to charge to 100% to run at 4am when needed.
This way you only normally charge to 80% but if you need all 100% you can get there just before you need it so minimizing time at 100%.
I use smart plug and Alexa.
When I get home: 'Alexa, charge bike for 90 minutes" ( because I know that 90 mins will get me to about 70-80% from 40%)
She responds: 'ok, waiting 15 minutes' ( let the battery cool down before charging it)
Normally that's it - the charger will turn on for 90 mins then turn off.
If I expect a long run tomorrow and want my battery fully charged:
'Alexa, Top up bike Battery '
she responds: - ' Ok, topup enabled, battery will charge at 4am for four hours'
Once setup, this is pretty much foolproof - just plug charger in bike and tell Alexa to charge the bike for xx
Awesome suggestion! @billium Can you share more details about the "smart plug" you're using? I'm also very Interested in trying this. Tired of forgetting that I left my battery on the charger and need to pull the plug!Get a smart plug and Google or Alexa.
Then set up a voice command to charge the bike to 70-80% when you get home and another command to charge to 100% to run at 4am when needed.
Ditto. I started using the small 2A charger from bosch which charges slowly but helps preserve my battery cells from stress It also doesn't get as hot as the 4A charger.I let it cool down first and then charge it to 100% with a "slow" charger the night before each ride.
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.