TwisterGripper
100 mW
What you do you think most likely happened here? critically low battery self discharge.
Working on a scooter for customer - initial problem: turns on, short power pulse then nothing.
I correctly diagnosed melted fuse holder and fuse - poor connection had it heating up and arcing until so much of the fuse had "vaporized" there was not enough metal to ensure good connection.
also , water had infiltrated the battery compartment - mud rocks etc…. found some corroded connections.
- someone before me had mucked around in there - foam was missing, allowing the battery and controller to slide around, a lot - there was abrasion wear on the battery wrapping - but not all the way through
- cleaned up connections, replaced fuse holder & fuse (all good soldered joints). added foam to securely hold battery and controller in place.
- test ride 1 - worked for a short bit - maybe 100 yards then power cut out.
- opened up battery compartment: fuse intact, connections seem good - I disconnected the previously corroded connectors and reconnected just in case of poor connection still - that did nothing.
- opened up controller - despite the rust on outer casing, it was all clean and sealed inside, no evidence of damage
- put it all back together and inexplicably, it powered up and worked perfectly again.
- test ride again - this time rode 1 km. good power, no faults.
I considered this a done job and put it away
Next morning I go to do another test ride and - its dead.
battery has drained down to 7.4 volts!!!!
- tested with charger - it slowly climbs - got it up to 13 volts after a few minutes (obviously not a smart charger). disconnected battery from everything, and watched the volt meter - volts dropped quickly back down to 7.4 volts on the battery main leads.
This battery pack is self discharging now. that problem did not exist before. I have not opened up the pack to inspect. at this point I've put too much time into it and it wont even hold voltage to "wake it up" - I hate telling the client it’s a total loss, and I'll likely eat the labor and offer a few bucks for scrap as I don't feel right taking money after getting approval for repairs, only to find more problems making it a money pit for the customer.
side note: while I had the scooter opened up after the first test ride when it died - after buttoning it back up, I heard a short "bzzzzt" almost like a quick electrical arc sound - pulled cover again and found no evidence of any arcs or shorts - so either I imagined it, or it was inside the controller or battery - still had power, so maybe that was when battery started self discharging, but still had enough volts at that point to power on and test ride.
What do you think is most likely cause? I am careful and knowledgeable enough not to have done anything stupid or cause a short on this unit. Im just baffled…battery was charged and stable at 52 volts when it was brought to me.
Is it possible because the kid rode it with a loose battery pack flopping around inside the casing it got damaged internally and my little bit of handling was just the final straw before something shorted? It happened while in my possession but I did nothing abnormal to cause it...
I will tear into it if they accept the scrap offer.
Working on a scooter for customer - initial problem: turns on, short power pulse then nothing.
I correctly diagnosed melted fuse holder and fuse - poor connection had it heating up and arcing until so much of the fuse had "vaporized" there was not enough metal to ensure good connection.
also , water had infiltrated the battery compartment - mud rocks etc…. found some corroded connections.
- someone before me had mucked around in there - foam was missing, allowing the battery and controller to slide around, a lot - there was abrasion wear on the battery wrapping - but not all the way through
- cleaned up connections, replaced fuse holder & fuse (all good soldered joints). added foam to securely hold battery and controller in place.
- test ride 1 - worked for a short bit - maybe 100 yards then power cut out.
- opened up battery compartment: fuse intact, connections seem good - I disconnected the previously corroded connectors and reconnected just in case of poor connection still - that did nothing.
- opened up controller - despite the rust on outer casing, it was all clean and sealed inside, no evidence of damage
- put it all back together and inexplicably, it powered up and worked perfectly again.
- test ride again - this time rode 1 km. good power, no faults.
I considered this a done job and put it away
Next morning I go to do another test ride and - its dead.
battery has drained down to 7.4 volts!!!!
- tested with charger - it slowly climbs - got it up to 13 volts after a few minutes (obviously not a smart charger). disconnected battery from everything, and watched the volt meter - volts dropped quickly back down to 7.4 volts on the battery main leads.
This battery pack is self discharging now. that problem did not exist before. I have not opened up the pack to inspect. at this point I've put too much time into it and it wont even hold voltage to "wake it up" - I hate telling the client it’s a total loss, and I'll likely eat the labor and offer a few bucks for scrap as I don't feel right taking money after getting approval for repairs, only to find more problems making it a money pit for the customer.
side note: while I had the scooter opened up after the first test ride when it died - after buttoning it back up, I heard a short "bzzzzt" almost like a quick electrical arc sound - pulled cover again and found no evidence of any arcs or shorts - so either I imagined it, or it was inside the controller or battery - still had power, so maybe that was when battery started self discharging, but still had enough volts at that point to power on and test ride.
What do you think is most likely cause? I am careful and knowledgeable enough not to have done anything stupid or cause a short on this unit. Im just baffled…battery was charged and stable at 52 volts when it was brought to me.
Is it possible because the kid rode it with a loose battery pack flopping around inside the casing it got damaged internally and my little bit of handling was just the final straw before something shorted? It happened while in my possession but I did nothing abnormal to cause it...
I will tear into it if they accept the scrap offer.