OK - fed up with seldom used ebike

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So - we have 2 ebike - my main bike and my wife's folder that she never uses - Carrera CrossCity-e


I take it out for a ride when I remember but over the Autumn I kinda forgot

and now the cells - which are only a year old - are unbalanced and it will cost getting on for £100 to sort it out

so - I'm thinking I will just leave it as a normal bike - leave the battery out

But

I thinking - is it worth replacing the rear hub motor wheel with a normal one
or would I be better off just leaving it and putting up with the small amount of extra resistance and weight???


anyone tried it??
 

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
Pay the £100 to fix it and sell it. Doing what you suggest will just leave you with a ruined, heavy e bike you still don't use
 

Dadam

Senior Member
Location
SW Leeds
Who is it that wants to charge £100? I'm assuming Halfords as it's a Carrera?
Why does it need balancing? Will it charge at all?

And if it does definitely need doing, why isn't this being done under warranty? I would submit that regardless what Halfords say, they should be doing it for free as under the Consumer Rights Act goods should last a reasonable length of time. which I would further submit should be way more than a year for an expensive device such as an ebike.
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
Rebalance yourself or at least have a go. Charge 100% then discharge down to 20%. Do it several times

If it doesn't work I be onto Halfords to sort under warranty. These batteries aren't cheap and do need a bit of care to get the longest life out of them.
 
OP
OP
E
Location
Z’ha’dum
Maybe I was unclear
The bike is several years old - - well out of warranty.

Due the low level of usage the cells degraded last year as I got the battery recelled - at that point the bike was over 4 years old
Halfords are not involved. I am sure thye would sell me a new battery but when I tried online they were out of stock - and I tried several times over a few months - possibly as the motor system has changed since we bought it.

As a result I got a 3rd party to recell it - I have used them before when my old ebike's battery got so low on range that it was not useable - which took many years.
Anyway - the battery was fine for over a year after the recell - but at the end of the summer I forgot to do the use/recharge cycles that I normally try to fit in - partly due to illness.
When I remembered I took the bike out and it seemed fine and recharged
But next time I used it the charge was used up quite fast and then the charger refused to charge it - in detail the 'fully charged' light just stayed on green when it normally goes to red until charging is complete
For more details - it is a 36V battery and a meter says it is delivering 33.4V

I contacted the recelling company and they basically blame lack of use - hence the warranty was invalidated.
Again - Halfords are not involved

If anyone knows of a company - especially one in the North West - then I would be grateful


Thanks
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
Maybe I was unclear
The bike is several years old - - well out of warranty.

Due the low level of usage the cells degraded last year as I got the battery recelled - at that point the bike was over 4 years old
Halfords are not involved. I am sure thye would sell me a new battery but when I tried online they were out of stock - and I tried several times over a few months - possibly as the motor system has changed since we bought it.

As a result I got a 3rd party to recell it - I have used them before when my old ebike's battery got so low on range that it was not useable - which took many years.
Anyway - the battery was fine for over a year after the recell - but at the end of the summer I forgot to do the use/recharge cycles that I normally try to fit in - partly due to illness.
When I remembered I took the bike out and it seemed fine and recharged
But next time I used it the charge was used up quite fast and then the charger refused to charge it - in detail the 'fully charged' light just stayed on green when it normally goes to red until charging is complete
For more details - it is a 36V battery and a meter says it is delivering 33.4V

I contacted the recelling company and they basically blame lack of use - hence the warranty was invalidated.
Again - Halfords are not involved

If anyone knows of a company - especially one in the North West - then I would be grateful


Thanks

That sounds like a cell has gone faulty and pulled down the voltage. Another repair
 
Maybe I was unclear
The bike is several years old - - well out of warranty.

Due the low level of usage the cells degraded last year as I got the battery recelled - at that point the bike was over 4 years old
Halfords are not involved. I am sure thye would sell me a new battery but when I tried online they were out of stock - and I tried several times over a few months - possibly as the motor system has changed since we bought it.

As a result I got a 3rd party to recell it - I have used them before when my old ebike's battery got so low on range that it was not useable - which took many years.
Anyway - the battery was fine for over a year after the recell - but at the end of the summer I forgot to do the use/recharge cycles that I normally try to fit in - partly due to illness.
When I remembered I took the bike out and it seemed fine and recharged
But next time I used it the charge was used up quite fast and then the charger refused to charge it - in detail the 'fully charged' light just stayed on green when it normally goes to red until charging is complete
For more details - it is a 36V battery and a meter says it is delivering 33.4V

I contacted the recelling company and they basically blame lack of use - hence the warranty was invalidated.
Again - Halfords are not involved

If anyone knows of a company - especially one in the North West - then I would be grateful


Thanks

If the battery is reading 33.4V that is higher than the cut off so why not try discharging the battery a bit more and charging again, repeated charge cycles may revive the more dormant cells as the BMS has more chance to balance the cells. Charge in a fairly warm room and leave for a long time well beyond the normal charge times to give the BMS maximum time to balance the cells. Obviously only do this while you can monitor the battery charging and never over-night un-monitored for such a battery.
 
OP
OP
E
Location
Z’ha’dum
If the battery is reading 33.4V that is higher than the cut off so why not try discharging the battery a bit more and charging again, repeated charge cycles may revive the more dormant cells as the BMS has more chance to balance the cells. Charge in a fairly warm room and leave for a long time well beyond the normal charge times to give the BMS maximum time to balance the cells. Obviously only do this while you can monitor the battery charging and never over-night un-monitored for such a battery.

WIll give it a go

thanks
 

Tenkaykev

Guru
Location
Poole
Had an Email from Decathlon advertising a new Electric Cargo Bike. It’s longer at the back and has modular luggage/ child seat etc. 170kg carrying capacity excluding rider and bike weight. £3,500.
 
Had an Email from Decathlon advertising a new Electric Cargo Bike. It’s longer at the back and has modular luggage/ child seat etc. 170kg carrying capacity excluding rider and bike weight. £3,500.

The 170kg does include the rider but not the bike weight. So if you are 120kg you have 50kg of cargo capacity. What's interesting (to me at least) is it has a direct drive hub motor with 58Nm torque. So the windings must be designed for low speed perhaps the 25km/h or less of EU legislation. You don't often see direct drive hub motors featured on pre-built ebikes at least over here. No mention that I can see if regen is included which can increase range and almost eliminate wear to brake pads. That would seem an obvious feature to include. It's good that Decathlon have moved away from unreliable proprietary solutions for this ebike instead going for an ultra reliable direct drive hub motor.
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
The 170kg does include the rider but not the bike weight. So if you are 120kg you have 50kg of cargo capacity. What's interesting (to me at least) is it has a direct drive hub motor with 58Nm torque. So the windings must be designed for low speed perhaps the 25km/h or less of EU legislation. You don't often see direct drive hub motors featured on pre-built ebikes at least over here. No mention that I can see if regen is included which can increase range and almost eliminate wear to brake pads. That would seem an obvious feature to include. It's good that Decathlon have moved away from unreliable proprietary solutions for this ebike instead going for an ultra reliable direct drive hub motor.

According to review comments there is regen
 

Tenkaykev

Guru
Location
Poole
The 170kg does include the rider but not the bike weight. So if you are 120kg you have 50kg of cargo capacity. What's interesting (to me at least) is it has a direct drive hub motor with 58Nm torque. So the windings must be designed for low speed perhaps the 25km/h or less of EU legislation. You don't often see direct drive hub motors featured on pre-built ebikes at least over here. No mention that I can see if regen is included which can increase range and almost eliminate wear to brake pads. That would seem an obvious feature to include. It's good that Decathlon have moved away from unreliable proprietary solutions for this ebike instead going for an ultra reliable direct drive hub motor.

Ah, yes. I went back and re read the blurb onsite.
 
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