Little-Acorn said:
The rest of the project is hanging fire as I wait for delivery of the 48V 20Ah LiFePO4 battery, BMS, and charger from EP-Battery in Hong Kong.
And now it's not hanging fire any more. Today, Christmas Eve Day, the postman (looking very tired) delivered a heavy package, rather scrunched looking, with Chinese writing all over it. Inside was the 48V 20Ah LiFePO4 battery, a BMS with a big Vpower sticker on it, and a charger with another Vpower sticker.
Right out of the shipping box, the battery voltage measured 52.9V, occasionally showed 53A (digital Fluke multimeter). Plugged the battery into the charger and plugged it all in. There are two LEDs on the charger, one showed red and the other showed yellow. After about 10 minutes, the yellow one turned green. A few minutes after that, it turned yellow again, and kept cycling every minute or two. Unplugged everything, wondering if the battery were already charged, even after nearly 2 months at sea. Battery voltage at this point was around 57V.
Whipped out the tools, put a plywood pad on the back rack, connected up what was needed, bungeed the battery onto the back rack, and did thisanthat until I felt ready to try it out. Plugged in the thick black/red wires from the BMS to the conttroller, and the three lights on the thumb throttle came on brightly. Cables hanging all over the place, a few VERY bad solder joints, but I just hadda. Pressed the thumb throttle very gently, nothing. Pressed it further, still nothing. Pressed all the way, nada.
Noticed I still had a lot of black plastic electricians tape around the thumb throttle, left from when I was standing the bike on its handlebars and seat, installing electrical things. Some of it was wrapped around the red mystery button. Peeled it all off, tried the thumb throttle lightly, still nothing. Pressed the red mystery button, which went in, clicked, and then stayed most of the way in. Pressed the thumb throttle slightly, and the bike bumped forward and made a humming sound.
Making my own humming sound, I trundled it out into the driveway (this e-bike ain't light), checked over everything fearfully, straddled it, and pushed offf. Pedalled up to speed, pressed the thumb throttle, and it picked up nicely. Tooled around the neighborhood with wires etc. flapping in the breeze, then pulled onto a nearby straight stretch. Sun was well down by now, and I kept a lookout for low-flying reindeer. Pedalled from a standing start, then opened the throttle. Bike was up to 15-20 pretty quickly. Went down to the end of the street, slowed down for a U-turn, and came back. This time I held the throttle wide open. As I passed under a street light near the end, saw the speedometer saying 23.3 MPH.
Not as much as I expected, but which that disgracefully sloppy, slapdash installation I had done, I was grateful it ran at all. This answers one question: the power cables do indeed come out the correct side of the hubmotor, even if they have to go through the chain.
A VERY satisfying day. Put the bike away, after removing the battery (with all that weight so high, it falls over with the original kickstand, that's next on the wish list). Took the family to see San Diego's Christmas Card Lane, which is about 2 miles from my house.
Ho ho ho! My first e-bike is a reality! Needs some adjustments and a lot of cleaning up, but the eagle has landed!
Coupla questions for you gurus out there:
What do the LEDs mean on this 5A 48V VPower charger? One stayed red all the time I had it powered. The other started out yellow as it charged the battery for a bit, then started cycling between yellow and green, about once per minute. Does this mean the battery is fully charged?
Andd, should all three lights on the thumb throttle, be on at the same time? I thought the top one (green) meant the battery was fairly full; middle one (yellow) means it's starting to run out, and bottom one (red) means it is getting near exhausted. Do I have the wrong idea about this? What does it mean when all three are on at once, and staying that way?
Thanks, all!