Reading: 304 (
Oct. 31: Same battery.
Reading: 261 (
Temps: 50s and 60s (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
-----------------------------------------------
Folks,
I have been a fan of my (wired) Gen III iPro. In fact, I'm pretty certain that two of my friends (40+ racers) will be treating themselves this Christmas to some ibike power meters, possibly in part because of my positive reviews. I have no ax to grind, but I have to say that I am starting to get more than frustrated with the iPro because of the speed with which the battery dies in cooler weather. Although my iPro gave consistent power readings during the summer, it has been terribly inconsistent this fall.
Inconsistency breeds a lack of confidence (in the data).
I have had several questionable readings lately. I have been tolerating it, mostly because I have been doing a lot of easy rides with long hours. But yesterday's numbers were especially frustrating. I went out for my monthly 20-minute FTP test (no fun). Before the ride, I put my iPro outside for a while, before I turned it on, so that it could adapt to the climate. The day before the test, I had even put in a new battery because the old one, which was only a few days old, was down to 274. I then pedaled out to my test road. Before the test, I did another wind cal, in a spot with no wind, and got set to go. Five minutes into the test, while pushing 29 mph on a level road and into a slight but noticeable headwind, I generated for more than two minutes only 178 watts. 178 watts? I'm just a cat 3, but that's not much. It's definitely not what propels a 150-lb rider (174 total weight) at 29 mph on a level road. Bottom line: After a week of tapering, I had to stop the test. Frustrating.
iBike needs to fix this battery problem.
If there is a fix, please let me know. I hope that replacing the battery isn't the only remedy. I have done that --- three times, lately. Within days, it faded below 275. And it faded in weather that isn't even that cold (50s and 60s). I have seen a post in which a rider with mad electronics skills rigged an external battery. Really? Is that the remedy? I simply don't know how to do that, and I wouldn't want to teach myself while tinkering with a $400 product. Shouldn't iBike sell something like an external battery? Or offer some other solution?
When I bought the iPro this summer, I was very happy with it. I gloated about how my power meter cost and weighed much, much less than Brand X while also producing much, much more data during the ride. And I was aware that cooler weather affected the battery. However, I didn't know the weather would affect it this much. Velocomp should post a clear warning that its power meters won't work -- reliably, all the time -- from October to April, or the time of year when a rider really needs a power meter for training.