That would've really sucked if the bag had opened in a different part of the roll....
Since the wheel fell off, I have been uber-paranoid at every little tilt of the trike, and since I ride on crowned and often very uneven roads most places, it sucks, cuz I keep getting little panic attacks, and have almost crashed twice because of my reaction to the sudden slight (VERY slight) rightward tilt of the trike--causing me to instinctively slam on the brakes and lean to the left and because nothing is actually wrong until I do that, the trike almost flips over to the left (into traffic).
So far all Iv'e gotten is an adrenaline rush. But if I can't stop myself from doing that, it's gonna get me squoooshed.
In ohter news, I was gonna post three days worth of data tonight, cuz I fell asleep before doing it last night or the night before, but I've lost the paper with Mon and Tue data on it.

All I can really remember is the distances of just under 35 miles each day, the times of just over 2 hours 10 minutes or so each day, and around 26WH/mile, around 16Ah used, and average speeds of around 16MPH.
For Monday, I took my usual route from the previous two weeks of Butler to 51st Ave, south to Northern, west to 91st Ave, then instead of continuing to 94th, I turn south on 91st and head down to McDowell and west to 101st ave to work. Then home was the reverse of that.
For Tuesday, it's the same to work, but coming home it's the parking lot to 99th Ave then north on that to Northern, then my usual route home.
For today, Wednesday, I took 29th south to Northern, west to 91st, south to Thomas, west to 99th, south to the parking lot to work. Then home was the reverse of that. It was notably faster, and more efficient, as I did not have to stop very much, unlike when I take Butler, which has lots of stops (at least every half mile, sometimes more, plus detours where Butler doesnt' go thru, and places where there's lots of speed bumps I have to almost completely stop to go over (less than 5MPH for some of them, or it's like driving over a small pile of 2x4s at 40MPH in a car).
I may do the same ride to work again tomorrow, except go west on Indian school instead of Thomas, cuz the road between IS and Thomas is like a washboard. Imagine a 2x2 in the road every 10 feet or so, and riding over that at 20MPH on a no-suspension trike, or say 4x4s instead of 2x2s and at 40-50MPH in a car. That's what it's like to ride most of 91st ave between IS and Thomas, because of cracks in the road that are "pinched together" like crustal faults, and they stick up like little mountain ranges, some of them more than an inch or two high (and only as wide as a broomstick or so).
I have to either slow down to 10-15MPH, or be beaten up and tossed all over the place, actually bouncing around the road dangerously, for that kind of road surface. There's some stretches of 99th Ave like that too, around the same area, which makes me wonder about the land there.
I have considered taking the time while riding home to explore parking lots and such to see if they also exhibit the topology; if they don't then it's likely to be a symptom of traffic slowing and accelerating, compressing and stretching the asphalt surface (which is probably just a few inches thick over dirt, like much of Phoenix, instead of an asphalt layer over a concrete bed over gravel over rock, like a good road should be, so it will last more than a couple of years before crackign apart).
The other major danger is the manhole covers, as most of them are near the edges of the road, and they pave around them, not raising them up when they add new asphalt, so some of them are several inches below the surface of the road--worse than a standard pothole because these are sharp-edged holes, some of them a handspan across and some a foot or two, depending on what kind of manhole cover/access they are for.
Sometimes (when the resulting hole would be right in a car tire's path) they will add a concrete ring around it instead of asphalt, and a new metal cover ring inside that for the cover to sit on, so it is all nearly level, only a half inch or less border (some stick up, some are still holes); those are tolerable but still not much fun. The other kind are very dangerous to any bike, and could be fatal to me on the trike if I hit one wrong, causing either rear wheel to dip quickly enough it could flip me over, or the small front wheel could sink in far enough fast enough on some to potentially cause me to either lose control or to actually flip over the bars. Niether is that likley, but losing control is a possibility--I almost have a few times when I couldn't avoid them, and hadn't slowed enough before reaching them.
Anyway, today's data to compare shows Wh/mile is notably less than with all the lttle stops and starts, and time is faster too. Also, apparently I have a lot of side street detours on the Butler route, adding up to nearly a couple of miles or more! Actual trip time is also significantly less, by as much as half an hour (trip time listed in my data is what the CA shows, that doesnt' include time waiting at lights and stuff, just the time while moving--that's one pet peeve of mine, that hte CA doesn't have an option for true elapsed time)
1h 50m 48s trip time
32.83miles
20.7mph max
17.7mph avg
22.8Wh/mile
13.84Ah
746.3Wh
30.1Amax
58.0Vstart
51.4Vrest
50.8Vmin
Lighting battery use is dependent on actual travel time, as I run the lights all the time day or night. If I have to sit at a few lights waiting for a left turn for a while, that may increase use enough to notice because of the turn signal, but not very much. Typically it's around 8Ah for these trips, sometimes 7 and sometimes 9. I havent' written it down, because I don't haea wattmeter on the lights and I am always in a hurry to get the charger unhooked during break at work, and get it packed back in teh bag, so I barely have time to look at the display to be sure it says FULL and what the voltage is, and the Ah put back in. Haven't had time to write it down whn I see it, and I forget all but the gist of it later. At home, I almost always am so tired that I lay down right after I get home and get the dogs fed and let out to play, and start the bike charging, and give it a once-over checkup to be sure nothing's about to fall off. I usually fall asleep before charging is done, so it sits until I am aobut to leave the next morning, and I don't have time then to note it down either--just ot verify it says FULL and the voltage is right, and the Ah count is near what I expect.
I *have* had one problem, last night, where the traction pack charger (black Kingpower / kingpan) didn't finish the charge cycle for unknown reasons. It just had the red light on, no green or yellow, so it was in an unknown state. Pack was only at 58.0V instead of 58.2 like usual, and Ah count was still at 0.8something, meaning it hadn't fully reversed the count of Ah used. I turned it off and back on, but it is so close to full voltage that it wouldn't kick back on, so I had to hope it was still working but just stopped for some fault condition I don't ahve a list for.
When I staredt he charging after getting home today, it did start normally, verified by the CA readings. So hopeflly a onetime glitch. Hate to have it puke out on me whiel overnight charging and it not actually refil the pack at all--I wouldn't have time to do anything about that, and would have to take it with me and recharge at work (assuming it even *would* charge the pack at that point) so I could be certain of enough power to get home...I figure I can do 50 miles on this pack at present usage levels and just barely be at LVC of 49V (14s), 3.5V/cell. At 33+ miles each day, depending on path, I'd have to ride at a relative crawl to save enough power to make it home a second day without recharging from the first day and the outbound trip of the second.
Anyway, I'm dozing fitfully pretty often now so I should submit this post.
