hehe I'll remember to ask you the same question 4 times in some future discussionI get regularly aggressively questioned by some members and never worry about that.
manufacturers benefit from aggressive questioning.
hehe I'll remember to ask you the same question 4 times in some future discussionI get regularly aggressively questioned by some members and never worry about that.
manufacturers benefit from aggressive questioning.
And the OP might think it's up to his competitors to do their own legwork.
That is for secondary batteries not primary ones...
http://www.bike-eu.com/laws-regulations/nieuws/2016/11/eu-standard-for-e-bike-batteries-published-10128083That is for secondary batteries not primary ones...
I still have my doubts that he did. I expect that after reading the subsequent posts, your embarrassment has shifted in another direction.I feel almost embarrassed at the tone and nature of some of the comments on this thread.
I'm making a guess that one of the first things Inuell would have done before expending a lot of time, effort and money into this project was to make sure that what he was doing was going to gain certification. Maybe he called the 'test houses', explained the nature of his project and asked beforehand if a charging voltage of 57.6V would be acceptable for certification. Maybe he even went and had a meeting with them.
Oh guess what? He did.
The standard that applies to the bike is EN 15194. That standard might say that the battery must comply with other standards, so the battery must comply with all standards, including the maximum voltage referred to in EN 15194. The fact that battery standards allow other voltages doesn't make them comply with EN 15194.Well that is a bit ambiguous isn't it? On the standard document it says:
"This European Standard does not apply to:
For me the battery supplying the power is my primary battery...
- lithium cells;
- batteries other than lithium ion types;
- primary Batteries(including lithium types);
- batteries covered by the ISO 12405- series."
And the voltage limit is specified in EN 15194 which does refer to other EN documents for battery security which 50600-1 appears to be.
Unfortunately, that's not how the nomenclature is used.For me the battery supplying the power is my primary battery....
I would read up to X volts as meaning X volts is the maximum allowed. It does not seem ambiguous to me. In previous contributions, I have suggested that this level has origins in obscure telecommunications engineering standards, e.g the ring and tip voltages on old analogue exchanges.The standard that applies to the bike is EN 15194. That standard might say that the battery must comply with other standards, so the battery must comply with all standards, including the maximum voltage referred to in EN 15194. The fact that battery standards allow other voltages doesn't make them comply with EN 15194.
The whole issue is whether "up to and including 48v" means an absolute limit of 48v or a battery of nominal 48v. As it's not clear in the standard, it depends on the interpretation of the tester.
Fortunately not. Inunell has stated quite clearly:I still have my doubts that he did. I expect that after reading the subsequent posts, your embarrassment has shifted in another direction.
I disagree. D8veh is foremost an engineer, not a silver-tongued salesman or politician. He can be abrasive but a bully he is not.Unfortunately you just come over as a sad old bully trying to protect his turf as the forum 'expert'.
He is a bully. An embarrassing one at that.I disagree. D8veh is foremost an engineer, not a silver-tongued salesman or politician. He can be abrasive but a bully he is not.
A lot of these tech heads are on the spectrum and are unaware or simply don't care how they come across - they don't go out of their way to offend people but their passion and interests outweigh everything else.He is a bully. An embarrassing one at that.
He's tried to bully me in a different thread and his bullying manner with Inunell was excruciating to read. Trying to make yourself look smart and clever by putting other people down and making them look small are the actions of a bully.
Good manners, civility and decency cost nothing. He thinks he's still in the classroom lecturing 12 year old kids.
me? only when the subject of conversation is about batteries.A lot of these tech heads are on the spectrum