WonderProfessor
100 W
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2009
- Messages
- 126
Greetings, Friends. Once again, we come for succor and aid in time of need. This question concerns a battery and charger combination. The battery is a 36-volt, 20-amp, 3C, lithium-iron-phosphate battery and seems to be working fine. It is the charger that is giving me fits and thoroughly confusing me. The chargers says that it should be producing 42.5 volts and that is what is does ... sometimes. Other times, it produces 16 volts and on one occasion, it was producing 20 volts. Allow me to elaborate:
This battery does not have a visible BMS as does my other battery (a Ping 36-volt, 20-amp hour 1C lithium-iron-phosphate battery) so you do not know if it is at full capacity or not just by looking at it. After a ride, when you are sure that the battery is not completely filled, you plug in the charger. The charging light is supposed to go from green to red and that signals that the charger is charging the battery. Usually, it does not go from green to red and then you have to unplug the power cord to the charger, wait a few moments for the green light to completely go dark, and then re-plug the power cord into the charger. The green light goes from green to red and the charger starts then charging the battery. I thought to myself that something is definitely weird here. We need to investigate further.
I took out the multi-meter and started doing some measurements. After the charging light had gone from red to green, signaling that the battery was at full capacity, the voltage read 16 volts. (This was very confusing to me as I thought that the charging voltage always remained the same and that it was the amperage that changed when the battery was filled to capacity.) I did the same procedure discussed above to get the charger charging again, namely, I unplugged power cord to the charger, waited until the green charging light went dark, and then re-inserted the power plug to the charger. The green light came back on and this time, the voltage now read 42.5 volts. I plugged the charger into the battery and the charging light went from green to red, signaling that the charger was charging the battery. I let it charge for a couple of hours and returned. The charging light had gone from red back to green, signaling that the battery was at capacity (or, at least, the charger believed that the battery was at capacity). I measured the voltage and again, the voltage from the charger had again fallen to 16 volts. Again, I unplugged the power cord to the charger, waited until the green light had gone dark, and then re-inserted the power cord to the charger, and again, the voltage from the charger read 42.5 volts.
My question is: Is this normal? Is this the way some battery chargers work? Or is the charger faulty? Could I use my other charger that I use for my 36-volt, 20-amp hour, 1C Ping lithium-iron-phosphate battery? It produces 45.2 volts. (And it has never seemed to produce anything other than 45.2 / 45.3 volts.) Since this charger that came with the bike produces 42.5 volts (when it is working) and the other charger produces 45.2 volts, are they incompatible? Will 45.2 volts be too much voltage for the battery?
Some background: I purchased this bike used just a few weeks ago. It is a real gem. It is a Vision R30 recumbent with a bitchin' full-length Zipper fairing. (Vision is out of business but they made some very nice ‘bents. This was one of their lesser popular models but I think it was one of their best. For a recumbent, it is very light and has a comfortable and stable ride.) It has an Ecospeed Electric Mid Drive (EMD) Unit and is very, very fast. The battery is a Point 1 Tech, 36-volt, 20-amp hour, 3C lithium-iron-phosphate battery. There are no identifying markings on the charger except for a model number, KP4502JL, which does not bring anything up in either Google or Yahoo. Aside from the charger strangeness, I really feel that I got a helluva' deal since the Ecospeed EMD alone would cost far more than what I spent for the entire bike. And I knew it was only a matter of time before I wanted something far more powerful than my current e-bike. (http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=11339)
Many thanks for in advance any and all ideas, comments, suggestions, etc.
Respectfully submitted,
Frank Paiano
San Diego, California, USA
http://www.wonderprofessor.com
This battery does not have a visible BMS as does my other battery (a Ping 36-volt, 20-amp hour 1C lithium-iron-phosphate battery) so you do not know if it is at full capacity or not just by looking at it. After a ride, when you are sure that the battery is not completely filled, you plug in the charger. The charging light is supposed to go from green to red and that signals that the charger is charging the battery. Usually, it does not go from green to red and then you have to unplug the power cord to the charger, wait a few moments for the green light to completely go dark, and then re-plug the power cord into the charger. The green light goes from green to red and the charger starts then charging the battery. I thought to myself that something is definitely weird here. We need to investigate further.
I took out the multi-meter and started doing some measurements. After the charging light had gone from red to green, signaling that the battery was at full capacity, the voltage read 16 volts. (This was very confusing to me as I thought that the charging voltage always remained the same and that it was the amperage that changed when the battery was filled to capacity.) I did the same procedure discussed above to get the charger charging again, namely, I unplugged power cord to the charger, waited until the green charging light went dark, and then re-inserted the power plug to the charger. The green light came back on and this time, the voltage now read 42.5 volts. I plugged the charger into the battery and the charging light went from green to red, signaling that the charger was charging the battery. I let it charge for a couple of hours and returned. The charging light had gone from red back to green, signaling that the battery was at capacity (or, at least, the charger believed that the battery was at capacity). I measured the voltage and again, the voltage from the charger had again fallen to 16 volts. Again, I unplugged the power cord to the charger, waited until the green light had gone dark, and then re-inserted the power cord to the charger, and again, the voltage from the charger read 42.5 volts.
My question is: Is this normal? Is this the way some battery chargers work? Or is the charger faulty? Could I use my other charger that I use for my 36-volt, 20-amp hour, 1C Ping lithium-iron-phosphate battery? It produces 45.2 volts. (And it has never seemed to produce anything other than 45.2 / 45.3 volts.) Since this charger that came with the bike produces 42.5 volts (when it is working) and the other charger produces 45.2 volts, are they incompatible? Will 45.2 volts be too much voltage for the battery?
Some background: I purchased this bike used just a few weeks ago. It is a real gem. It is a Vision R30 recumbent with a bitchin' full-length Zipper fairing. (Vision is out of business but they made some very nice ‘bents. This was one of their lesser popular models but I think it was one of their best. For a recumbent, it is very light and has a comfortable and stable ride.) It has an Ecospeed Electric Mid Drive (EMD) Unit and is very, very fast. The battery is a Point 1 Tech, 36-volt, 20-amp hour, 3C lithium-iron-phosphate battery. There are no identifying markings on the charger except for a model number, KP4502JL, which does not bring anything up in either Google or Yahoo. Aside from the charger strangeness, I really feel that I got a helluva' deal since the Ecospeed EMD alone would cost far more than what I spent for the entire bike. And I knew it was only a matter of time before I wanted something far more powerful than my current e-bike. (http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=11339)
Many thanks for in advance any and all ideas, comments, suggestions, etc.
Respectfully submitted,
Frank Paiano
San Diego, California, USA
http://www.wonderprofessor.com