Hey guys, this is a long story.
I went to use my Ryobi electric riding mower for the first time this spring and found it DOA... initial investigation found that the outlet it was plugged into had failed and was providing no power, no idea how long the outlet was dead... may have been all winter based on the battery being flat dead. I moved the mower to the garage and pulled the battery pack, disconnecting the cells from each other and charging each one individually on a slow (2 amp) 12 V charger under the assumption that a slow charge was better after a really deep discharge. This took forever, and after complete I reassembled the pack. Pack voltage shows 50 Volts so I figured I was good to go! NOPE! Put in the key and turn it and get nothing. No solenoid click, no lights, no results at all. All plugs (main battery plug, seat safety switch, and the little plug at the back end of the battery) disconnected when I pulled the pack and the interconnections between cells are re-installed and have solid connections. Just to cover the owners manual troubleshooting, the battery pack is at 50 volts, the battery cables are all tight, the key is in and turned on, and the charger is not plugged into the mower.
I have a good set of tools and a good volt meter... now I just need troubleshooting advice other than the owners manual "is the key on?"
I know the official rating is 48 volts, but the pack voltage being 50ish (50 point something, not sure) wouldn't be the problem would it?
It may just be a worn out component unrelated the the battery being dead and revived, or it may have been something damaged when the outlet that the mower was plugged into (outdoor GFCI plug) failed.
Thanks for any advice. I purchased it almost 4 years ago, so I am out of warranty.
Keith
I went to use my Ryobi electric riding mower for the first time this spring and found it DOA... initial investigation found that the outlet it was plugged into had failed and was providing no power, no idea how long the outlet was dead... may have been all winter based on the battery being flat dead. I moved the mower to the garage and pulled the battery pack, disconnecting the cells from each other and charging each one individually on a slow (2 amp) 12 V charger under the assumption that a slow charge was better after a really deep discharge. This took forever, and after complete I reassembled the pack. Pack voltage shows 50 Volts so I figured I was good to go! NOPE! Put in the key and turn it and get nothing. No solenoid click, no lights, no results at all. All plugs (main battery plug, seat safety switch, and the little plug at the back end of the battery) disconnected when I pulled the pack and the interconnections between cells are re-installed and have solid connections. Just to cover the owners manual troubleshooting, the battery pack is at 50 volts, the battery cables are all tight, the key is in and turned on, and the charger is not plugged into the mower.
I have a good set of tools and a good volt meter... now I just need troubleshooting advice other than the owners manual "is the key on?"
I know the official rating is 48 volts, but the pack voltage being 50ish (50 point something, not sure) wouldn't be the problem would it?
It may just be a worn out component unrelated the the battery being dead and revived, or it may have been something damaged when the outlet that the mower was plugged into (outdoor GFCI plug) failed.
Thanks for any advice. I purchased it almost 4 years ago, so I am out of warranty.
Keith