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DieselnDust

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Everything posted by DieselnDust

  1. Where’s all the Remco going to crush Pogi In the road race pundits now?
  2. That leak is often inside the shock
  3. No
  4. Ah ok so the units have already been split. so it’s either the remote poploc that’s got a sticky plunge but more likely it’s on the shock side. Cape cycles or droo can sort it out. The single poploc units are at least serviceable to an extent
  5. The barrel adjuster could not cause the problems you describe. Likely it just crea enough volume or removed volume from the remote which allowed it to work. Means the remote should be bled but more than likely it’s about to fail soon
  6. I’m assuming the bike is equipped with a RockShox Monarch XX with XLR full sprint remote where both lefty and rear shock are locked and unlocked simultaneously via the hydraulic poploc? if yes then one of two things has gone wrong 1) the plastic plunger in the rear lockout circuit in the remote unit is broken and if this is the case then the rider would need to buy a two single poploc remote units somewhere and recording the hydraulics to the separated remotes to lock the lefty and rear shock independently. 2) the plunger in the Monsrxh XX rear shock is getting g stuck likely due to the seal breaking. This can be serviced and repaired. If neither of these options is available then it’s a new rear shock.
  7. Should have sync’s the garmin on Sunday past!
  8. Uswe is stupidly overpriced. the new Ryder pack is just as good and is just on R1000-00. NFW I’m spending R3000 on a overrated backpack https://rydercycling.co.za/product/ryder-flow-hydration-pack/ I’ve had many packs over the years. Camelback is the best in terms of reliability and longevity. I also have an USWE Outlander 2. I paid R991.00 landed direct from USWE. It retails for R2999.95 at sportsman’s warehouse. You can reduce that cost by 25% with vitality discount if you are on discovery. The Ryder Flow is pack is every bit as good with a similar harness and it retails for R1099,95 at sportsman’s and you can knock R275 off that with vitality. No way I’ll buy another USWE with the kind of prices they’re asking, ni empetho!
  9. Reinforces my view that the frame is faulty. If he’s been riding the bike loaded up in the manner it is then the frame layup is the problem. Impact failures are fairy tales. by and large ENVE is overpriced . It’s. It the same company it was 10years ago. They have cheapened their production to maximise profit and sacrifice quality. forcing crash replacement tells me they are in financial trouble and what to get as much cash back as possible . Check in with other Enve owners re recent warranty claims. Maybe you’ll see a disturbing pattern
  10. I’m not buying impact damage because that will display fractured fibres pointing into the inside of the tube. The pics indicate the fibre orientation to be pointing outward as if the tube has burst. That would suggest the tube has failed while bowed which could be during riding . Failure at a flexure point is a layup failure which means it’s a warranty issue
  11. They worked well but one ended up as a wEll trained clutch mechanic keeping them working well
  12. Good ride by Remco. Who knows what the Pog was up to today. Clearly didn’t look terribly interested in winning it despite pre race banter
  13. At least he could get it back on without needing to whip out a multi tool to adjust the chain guide first. I think the new DT Swiss DEG DF anti kick back freehub will Solve the problem for quick engagement hubs. In the past we just used a std 18T ratchet and never have too much issues with kick back derailment. Now we want fast engaging hubs but then want to owmot down with a kick back device …… cyclists, digging new holes everyday
  14. Tell us how you really feel
  15. Her XCO UCI seeding would apply not here finish position in the XCC World Champs race. For the World Champs these are separate events and Titles.
  16. no spares there anymore
  17. Discontinued unfortunately
  18. Indeed , support maketh the brand! I believe the new garmin nonlonger use LR44 coin cells but have a rechargeable? Is the rechargeable aso replaceable? That alone is worth its weight in gold. but what these issues illustrates is that Quarq and SRM have the PM formula nailed with their crank spider based units. Power2max is also superb and the rechargeable battery in the NG units can be replaced . With SRM you send it back to them as it’s hermetically sealed and they rebound the units shell back under a inert gas blanket.
  19. I'm not aware of any specific issue with battery reliability in Favero products. However, they claim the battery life to be 50-60hrs on a single charge and the battery will charge to 80% of rated capacity after 500 charge cycles. This is a typical spec for a li-ion battery or any other rechargeable lithium chemistry (so good luck with those BEV's folks) Garmin Rally offers up to 90hrs suggesting that their internal rechargeable Li-ion is of 50% higher nominal rated capacity which will mean you don't charge it as often and hence, if you ride 20hrs per week those 500 charge cycles will take you further than the 500 charge cycles of the Favero products. Charging methodology in the software can extend either products battery life (to 80% rated capacity) by up to 50% (700-800 charge cycles) but after this the battery is literally dying of old age. Now Garmin says they have a charge boost feature which allows you to put about 12 hrs of battery life into the battery in just 15min. This feature will likely reduce the useful life of the battery. From Google Ai: Reporting issues: Some users have reported issues with battery performance declining prematurely or with one pedal failing to charge. If this happens, Favero advises contacting customer support through the app for troubleshooting. The above isn't unusual for a Li-ion or an other battery type. Batteries are packed by machine and the quality assurance is automated. There will still be substandard cells that get through the QA process and end up in our purchased products: I took this from ScienceDirect: " Introduction Lithium-ion batteries are the prevalent technology for on-board energy storage in electromobility, mainly due to their high energy density – increasing two-fold over the last ten years – and their rapidly declining cost [1], [2]. However, incidents such as vehicle fires and rapid battery pack failure or deterioration resulting from fast charging pose a danger to passengers and could also harm the reputation of cell manufacturers and original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). Incidents of this nature can in part be attributed to insufficient cell quality and inadequate methods for assessing cell quality at the manufacturer’s facility [3]. Stochastic variations in the operative manufacturing conditions lead to cell inhomogeneities [4], [5], [6]. These include performance differences in electrode raw materials, variations due to machine wear and errors, or (sudden) changes in operating conditions (e.g. temperature, pressure, and humidity). Ultimately, the cumulative tolerances of chemical, mechanical, and electrical processes result in an inevitable minor to moderate production scatter between the produced lithium-ion cells [6], [7], [8], [9], [10]. Unless these errors are detected in the production process, they will result in potential defects in the produced battery cell, including impedance and capacity variations, varying self-discharge and heat generation rates, surface cracks, scratches, exposed foils, leaks, and overall varying attenuation velocities in performance [5], [9], [11]. Although the scrap rate per process step is in the range of tenths of a percent to a few percent [12], the accumulation of errors leads to a total production reject rate of 5 to 10% depending on the maturity and experience of the manufacturer [13], [14]. Consequently, if subsequent system-level failures are to be mitigated, detecting defective cells becomes a priority. One single defective cell in the pack is potentially enough to jeopardize the safety or function of the entire vehicle. Therefore, it is essential to ensure thorough cell screening at the end of production. In assembled battery modules for battery electric vehicles (BEVs), if they are not discarded, dissimilar or faulty cells can lead to a variation in the performance of modules (depending on whether a series or parallel configuration is used), an uneven temperature distribution, incomplete charging or discharging of several cells, safety problems, or accelerated degradation with effects up to and including premature failure [5], [9], [15], [16]. The large number of cells in current BEV battery packs increases the chance of having an outlier, should no sophisticated screening be deployed before distribution and assembly [17]. The shift to so-called cell-to-pack (CTP) designs, integrating many individual cells structurally and almost non-interchangeably into the vehicle design [18], [19], further increases this outlier risk. Therefore, individual defective or compromised cells can have major ramifications. The end-of-line (EOL) test – together with the subsequent grading – is the last process step during cell finalization, representing the last quality control prior to distribution to the respective customer. Essential cell properties are measured and checked in-line providing a traceable indicator of the overall cell performance. The non-invasive process step involves two types of categories, electrical and non-electrical tests. The former include internal resistance measurements via direct current internal resistance (DC-IR) or alternating current internal resistance (AC-IR) measurements for at least one state-of-charge (SOC) point as well as the monitoring of the open-circuit voltage (OCV) by means of additional self-discharge tests and insulation tests used dependent on the application [20], [21], [22], [23]. Nowadays, it is assumed that complete capacitance checks are often omitted, because cells with insufficient capacitance would be detected in the preceding process step of the formation. However, individual remeasurements per production batch may remain necessary to ensure that unilaterally limited capacity specifications are met. A special focus in quality assessment tends to be on the respective cell-to-cell variation within a production lot and the data-driven cycle life prediction, which can also be attempted on the basis of cell-specific formation data [24]. In the latter, optical inspections are usually carried out as part of further non-electrical tests to detect welding defects and impurities as well as cracks in the sealing seams in pouch cells. Dimension and weight tolerance checks are performed to maintain allowances for problematic cell swelling during module assembly and to avoid exceeding the total acceptable pack weight. Simple tolerance bands, and dynamic procedures up to and including model-based and neural network procedures are used for quality classification [5], [25], [26], [27], [28], [29], [30], [31], [32]. For an extensive overview of classification strategies for lithium-ion batteries, the reader is referred to Li et al. [33] and Li et al. [4]. In large-scale industry applications, proprietary measurement protocols are used, based on IEC 62660-1 [34] or similar standards. Both 100% testing and testing of just a few cells per production lot are common, with durations typically less than 24 h per EOL test. These statements were confirmed in a personal interview (CUSTOMCELLS Holding GmbH, Germany, personal communication, May 25, 2022). If cell production is separate from module construction in terms of location and organization, an incoming inspection analogous to the EOL test is often integrated into the process. The cell properties are determined and checked again, e.g. with constant current constant voltage (CC-CV) capacity checks, DC-IR determinations, OCV checks or impedance measurements at 1 kHz or 10 kHz (AC-IR) carries out on selected cells (BMZ Germany GmbH, Germany, personal communication, September 01, 2022). Detailed specifications for quality testing, which are not subject to the non-disclosure agreements (NDA) of the respective manufacturers, would be, because of the insufficient publicly available data and the mentioned necessity for high quality cells (Section 1.2), of considerable interest for academia. Considering the sheer number of cells produced, it is of great value to reduce the testing time and cost [21]. In principle, destructive and non-destructive analysis methods can be used to detect defects in batteries, although only the latter are reasonable in the production environment of the value chain as they do not degrade battery performance [35]. Wu et al. [35] have shown that some defects can be detected using a non-destructive computed tomography (CT) scan, whereas Sazhin et al. [36] demonstrated that internal short circuits can be evaluated by measuring the self-discharge current. David et al. [37] evaluated the impact of four electrode coating defects on cell performance using large-format 0.5 Ah pouch cells and verified that cells with non-uniform coatings in the form of line defects showed a severe capacity fade due to cathode degradation. The electrical and non-electrical methods of EOL testing mentioned in the preceding section allow the identification and classification of more or less severe cell-quality outliers, evidenced by the use of these methods in industry. However, with the exception of homogeneity studies performed by Xie et al. [38], [39], the authors of this study are not aware of any publications dealing with electrical and holistic fault detection on series-connected cells that could further increase the present throughput of parallelized quality tests. This article presents a novel method for the simultaneous characterization of multiple lithium-ion cells with the purpose of end-of-line test optimization in the context of cell production. On the basis of intentionally induced production defects, the detection of these faults is demonstrated. Extensive single-cell characterization provides measurement data for potential defect cases in lithium-ion cell production. In brief, the main elements and the scope of this study can be summarized as follows: • Production of coin cells with potential and application-related production defects 46 coin cells were built, of which 22 cells were used as references and six different fault types were represented by four cells each. • Investigation of the influence of these defect types on formation and single-cell characterization After assembly, the cells were measured during formation and in single-cell characterization, allowing an in-depth comparison of the observed variations. • Measurement of multiple series-connected cells (multi-cell characterization) demonstrating an optimized EOL-testing approach The measurement methodology allows the detection of the production defects shown while economizing on the required number of test channels. The remainder of this article is structured as follows: Section 2 introduces the multi-cell characterization method of lithium-ion cells and its potential area of application. Section 3 describes the experimental process in which production defects are incorporated in the coin cells and the different fault types considered, as well as the applied test procedures for formation, single-cell characterization, calendar aging and multi-cell characterization. The results of the measurements of the separate process steps are presented and discussed in Section 4. Finally, Section 5 summarizes the findings and describes possible future work."
  20. yes or the Wurth Silicone spray for garage door cables
  21. with the new SPD cleats, I'd get the MX versoin and be done with it for gravel, road and MTB
  22. yes so those are then galled. Heat isn't going to help here. You need to flush a lot of lubricant into the interface. Whatever you do DO NOT USE WEAK ACIDS LIKE VINEGAR OR HYDROCHLORIC ACID to dissolve the aluminium oxide. This will cause hydrogen embrittlement.. Here is an image of the spoke. The white threaded bit is the thread lock material. The green bit is a plastic sleeve that's supposed to provide anti seize while the wheel is assembled. This plastic compresses and eventually falls apart and the ball head then galls in the socket inside the white threaded bit. Sooooo your best bet is a lot of thin lubricant down the spoke so it soaks into the nipple and eventually allows the head to move inside that socket. I know your spokes are the carbon version but those have a glass insulator at the bond interface to almost eliminate the galvanic corrosion. That the corrosion is not at the spoke/ threaded head interface tells me its galling .
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