Pride Health & Beauty - Page 9 - Recent Questions, Troubleshooting & Support
Can you leave GoGo scooter batteries plugged in four three months
Do you mean a charger plugged in for four months ? or the battery pack on the scooter for four months ? if it not charging and left on the scooter they will discharge and may never recover.
Leaving it on charge for four months ?, the charger will go into trickle charge mode once it fully charged the batteries, manufacturers will agree this is a good thing , if left for weeks and weeks , it should be charged up fully once a week if not in use and i recommend removing the battery case as i seen issues arise from leaving a battery pack on a scooter for long periods of time, for starters they discharge quicker,.
My Jazzy 600 was plugged in & charging and I
I think I understand what you are describing based on some inadvertent button pushing on your part.
Sleep mode programming on the VSI controller by Penny and Giles Drive technology is the idle time of the power chair before it "goes to sleep". This computer menu is accessed using a hand held PP1 programmer that is plugged into the charging port of the joystick. Using this programmer one can scroll down to the sleep mode menu and set the time from I think 1 to 120 minutes ( I have not accessed this particular programming menu for quite some time).
If I put in 10 and save this number the chair will go into sleep mode after sitting and not being used for 10 minutes. The control may have dropped one of the settings due to a program glitch. I do not know of a way to reprogram this by pushing buttons on the control itself.
You should drive the chair into a local dealer who has a PP1 programmer and let them program it for you. This is a 2 minute deal and they should do this as a courtesy for you at no charge. If a technician comes out to your house they may charge you a minimum 1 hour labor charge.
While they have the programmer plugged in, have them check the fault log for any other problem areas. Hope this helps.
Click and clunk when moving from right rear wheel Pride Elite +
This can be caused by two things usually. One cause is the bolt holding wheel to the axle is a little loose so check to make sure it is very tight on the axle. The second click comes from flat-free tires. The tires have an adhesive applied at the factory and if you hit a bump, or if there's not enough to hold the tire tight to the rim, the tire will make a grinding click noise when it rolls and passes over this area. Pneumatic tires properly inflated don't make this noise since the air pressure keeps the tire fixed to the rim at the bead; flat free tires lack this pressure. Simply lubricate the area around the tire where it meets the rim on inside and outside, and drive it...noise should dissipate.
Back wheels make a loud clicking noise
Hi. Loud clicking noises from the rear wheels are usually caused by movement of the square steel key that fits into a groove on the axle inside the wheel hub. This is what drives the wheels.
You will probably get a click for each revolution of the wheels.
To fix it, remove the rear wheels and wipe a thin smear of grease on the key and axle, then replace the wheels.
The grease will allow the key to move slightly without making a noise, and help stop it from wearing.
It sometimes helps to also remove the front wheels, and wipe a thin smear of grease onto the front stub axles. There is no key in the front hubs, but the grease helps to prevent the bearings siezing on to the axles.
Good luck. Neil.
9/4/2018 4:41:14 AM •
Pride New...
•
Answered
on Sep 04, 2018
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