![]() |
Lightweight lithium battery?
Has anyone tried a lithium iron phosphate battery (LiFePO4) on their bike? They are advertised as direct replacements for the OE battery, and much lighter so for ~£130 you save around 4kg in weight. Also supposedly work OK with standard battery optimisers. The technology is more robust than laptop type Li-on batteries so hopefully they won't burst into flame! So apart from the price they look quite tempting. The only downside is the lower amp-hour rating so not good if you leave your bike standing for ages with an alarm and no Optimate as it knackers them. Same goes for a standard battery to be fair.
|
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
There was a complete thread with good debate about it the other week, then one morning it had just vanished off the face of the inter sv650web
|
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
I did a search and couldn't find anything - it must be a conspiracy to stop us buying them, "they" are watching us I tell you, damn those Ducati riders!
|
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
Quote:
Not sure what happened to offend the mods. However, the (or should I say my) rough conclusions were: The batteries are too fragile. Let them go flat and they are foobar. They are too expensive. A faulty reg/rec will destroy it very quickly. Plus points were the way in which the power is delivered when it comes to prolonged or repeated cranking. |
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
I saw that thread, could not decide if guy was asking about them or selling them.
If you want to see details there is a good thread on svrider, search for maviryk battery |
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
That guy was pretending to ask about them but was, in fact, advertising his own products. I think he got called on it, followed by thread deletion. It's a shame the rest of the discussion was lost.
|
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
Those batteries were good!
Shame it gone as it has the info i was wanting to have a look at in the New Year, was there |
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
They have no benefit for a bike that's being used, and if you're not using it you need to keep a lithium iron phosphate battery charged, so... how is this better than needing keeping a lead acid battery charged?
And as for better cranking, well if you need the extra cranking power that a lithium iron phosphate battery might, repeat; might, give then wouldn't it be better just to fix the bike so it starts properly? If the bike doesn't start right then 130 notes on a battery isn't going to help. |
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
Quote:
£130 in gym fees isn't going to shift that many pies !!! HTH :p |
Re: Lightweight lithium battery
Quote:
I wouldn't bother unless I was building something particularly special. For something meant for the track it would be a definite. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 05:08 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® - Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.