Milan
Member
From what I have read and gathered it looks quite clear that BT-E8035 is poorly designed. You can try hard and do the best you can (store it well, charge it well, drain it reasonably), yet you will end up having the worst bike battery that is degrading fast and will steal your km range. Most occasional users will not notice but frequent users, like myself, will see the fast degrading in capacity and loss of range. Please do not respond to this thread with your suggestions how we should treat this specific model/type of battery. You will not help this thread unless you have this battery and are using it frequently. I am just sadly trying to inform all owners of BT-E8035 that we all have the same problem and the way out is to gather evidence/stats and provide this information to Shimano to resolve this. My point here is clear: this battery is faulty, poorly designed and is not fit for purpose. Anyone who has got a bike with this battery should know about it and should get in touch with Shimano to make their claim. The sooner, the better. Could you, dear owners of BT-E8035, provide simple stats + commenting how you actually use the bike (such as I ride every other day, charge it this or another way, what modes you use, what temperatures you bike, where you store your bike while charging). From what we know, this battery in 10 cycles losses 10% percent of capacity. After that the degrading slows down a little but it simply continues and after around 5000 km, your battery has got 76% of capacity and is dead and not fit for purpose. Use the template below to provide evidence that this really true. The template for any further posts is this:
My battery stats:
1) # of charging cycles = 92
2) remaining capacity = 76%
3) charger = EC-E6002
4) km total = 4989
5) assistance = most rides 97% eco mode, 1-2% trail, boost almost never, off mode employed downhill
6) charging style and storage = bike stored inhouse at 22 degrees, charged prior to biking next day at the temp of 22 degrees, if not biking next day left at what is left (two to three bars). If not biking longer than two days, charged to approx. 80% and left to be fully charged prior to any future rides. Temperatures outside here are 15 to 35 spring to summer. -5 to 5 during fall and winter. The drop in range was fast in the first six months, i.e. lost 16% of the battery capacity per 1500 km. Most users experience 10% loss of capacity and range in the first ten cycles.
In order to provide stats, unless you own Shimano diagnostic tool, you will most likely have to download STunlocker app and connect it to your bike. You may think about this app whatever you want to, nonetheless, it gets us where we need to. It reads the data that Shimano dumps for their diagnostic tool. Spare us of your posts and discussions about the use of STunlocker. The app is great and perfect help for our cause.
My battery stats:
1) # of charging cycles = 92
2) remaining capacity = 76%
3) charger = EC-E6002
4) km total = 4989
5) assistance = most rides 97% eco mode, 1-2% trail, boost almost never, off mode employed downhill
6) charging style and storage = bike stored inhouse at 22 degrees, charged prior to biking next day at the temp of 22 degrees, if not biking next day left at what is left (two to three bars). If not biking longer than two days, charged to approx. 80% and left to be fully charged prior to any future rides. Temperatures outside here are 15 to 35 spring to summer. -5 to 5 during fall and winter. The drop in range was fast in the first six months, i.e. lost 16% of the battery capacity per 1500 km. Most users experience 10% loss of capacity and range in the first ten cycles.
In order to provide stats, unless you own Shimano diagnostic tool, you will most likely have to download STunlocker app and connect it to your bike. You may think about this app whatever you want to, nonetheless, it gets us where we need to. It reads the data that Shimano dumps for their diagnostic tool. Spare us of your posts and discussions about the use of STunlocker. The app is great and perfect help for our cause.