Pudsey Bear
Forum Member
Bloody unfair though.
I know nothing about Electric Scooters so the following may be totally wrong.....While away we went to a botanical garden and so Liz could enjoy it I took the scoot, the access was as usual pretty crap, but I carried on and the lowered kerb stopped it dead, the whole thing died so after a few times of switching it off it eventually came back to life, so we carried on and it seemed okay but after a while, it stopped dead again and then again so I looked at the battery gauge and it was in the red so I decided to go back the van, and it cut out so many times on the way and I had to remover and replace the battery each time, so I got off and folded it up and just dragged it, I chucked it in the van and didn't bother with it until today having decided to sell it, so I had it on charge for two days and I got it out of the van today in order to give it a bit of a clean as it has managed to get dirty, but I thought lets just give it a try on our road which is quite steep and very rough I went 0.3 miles up and then back down, it also tackled out short but steep drive, so I put it back in the van as is and popped it back on charge, now I don't know what to do.
Does any of the above mean anything?
Possibly I suppose but its a Li battery.I know nothing about Electric Scooters so the following may be totally wrong.....
I think yours is running a Lead Acid battery? Is that right? If so, The battery voltage will drop as the charge is used up and I would have thought the scooter - if it is a problem of the battery dying - would have got slower and slower rather than just stopping dead? and switching on and off a few times wouldn't have any effect. If the above is right, could the problem be bad connection/faulty control board/switch, etc rather than with the battery? maybe something that goes open-circuit when it gets hot and then when things cool a little, makes connection again (hence why off and on a few times may appear to fix it?)
In which case ignore the above One of the 'benefits' of lithium is you get no warning before it just dies on you.Possibly I suppose but its a Li battery.
the kerb was about 1-2'' high and it has very small wheels so I should have just stopped and lifted it up, I've managed others okay and I told them about it.Definitely something not right if you can get up dropped kerbs, I can ‘bounce’ mine up normal kerbs. Battery’s are frequently in poor condition on second hand mobility scooters which is why I said to allow for buying new battery’s in an earlier post.
I have a 12V charger for my scooter in the van but I found it seemed to take longer than using the 300W inverter and the mains charger. As mine takes a long time to recharge though it could be there is no difference.
I bought my 12V charger online from a shop that sells all sorts of mobility stuff but don’t recall the name. Should be plenty around if you have a Google.
No, too much messing about I'd rather just not bother, nowhere to park one anyway.Would you be better looking at cheap second hand but bigger mobility scooters and taking a trailer? Not ideal I know but you need something that will get you about
If someone NEEDS a Mobility Scooter but doesn't really want one, that looks like a good option.Good for the money
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