Prevent is the key word. You need to store the bag somewhere where fire will not spread. They do a good job containing flames but there will still be smoke and some flames. Hope this answers your question.
@EbikePros I have been scared to buy an ebike after watching a lot of videos of escooters or ebike batteries just randomly catching fire. It's this a lot to due to negligence from the owner leaving it in the charger too long or are batteries just coming faulty from the manufacturer?
@silentangel1011 yes you hit nail on the head. Many of the gen 1 bikes and others ordered from overseas had batteries without a battery management system (bms) and were overcharged or they were modified and would cause fires. Most new gen ebikes are pretty safe as long as you use the dedicated charger. We have a luckeep ebike for sale withe a ul certified battery. Have a look at www.ebikeprosusa.com.
Will this help prevemt house fires?
Prevent is the key word. You need to store the bag somewhere where fire will not spread. They do a good job containing flames but there will still be smoke and some flames. Hope this answers your question.
@EbikePros I have been scared to buy an ebike after watching a lot of videos of escooters or ebike batteries just randomly catching fire. It's this a lot to due to negligence from the owner leaving it in the charger too long or are batteries just coming faulty from the manufacturer?
@silentangel1011 yes you hit nail on the head. Many of the gen 1 bikes and others ordered from overseas had batteries without a battery management system (bms) and were overcharged or they were modified and would cause fires. Most new gen ebikes are pretty safe as long as you use the dedicated charger. We have a luckeep ebike for sale withe a ul certified battery. Have a look at www.ebikeprosusa.com.
@@EbikePros how reliable is that brand never heard of it. Okay makes me feel more safe about ebikes.
@silentangel1011 in my opinion very reliable, EGWE, Biktrix, Fiido, electric, addmotor are good economical choices.