Ninebot ES1: Difference between revisions
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The | The '''Ninebot ES1''' is a budget scooter made by [[Segway-Ninebot|Ninebot]]. | ||
It is the first of the "KickScooter" series also known as the KS or ES(Electric Scooter) series. | |||
Attaching a [[Ninebot NEB1002-H1|NEB1002-H1]] battery to an ES1 makes it into a [[Ninebot ES3]]. | |||
This scooter was superseded by the [[Ninebot ES2]]. | |||
[[File:NinebotES1.jpg|thumb|512px|center|The Ninebot ES1 via Segway[https://static.segway.com/pub/media/catalog/product/cache/92222f9d2af9be9f0c7a6d1d79f6b6e0/k/s/ks1-p3_1_1.jpg].]] | [[File:NinebotES1.jpg|thumb|512px|center|The Ninebot ES1 via Segway[https://static.segway.com/pub/media/catalog/product/cache/92222f9d2af9be9f0c7a6d1d79f6b6e0/k/s/ks1-p3_1_1.jpg].]] | ||
== | The main page for guides relating to this model is at [[Ninebot ESX Stuff]]. | ||
==Specifications== | |||
Original specs [https://store.segway.com/segway-ninebot-kickscooter-es1 via Segway]. | Original specs [https://store.segway.com/segway-ninebot-kickscooter-es1 via Segway]. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+Ninebot ES1 | |+Ninebot ES1 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Dimensions | |Dimensions | ||
|Unfolded: Approx. 40 | |Unfolded: Approx. 40 × 17 × 45 in (102 × 43 × 113 cm)<br/> Folded: Approx. 45 × 17 × 16 in (113 × 43 × 40 cm) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Net Weight | |Net Weight | ||
Line 23: | Line 31: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Advertised Range | |Advertised Range | ||
|Approx. | |Approx. 15.5 miles (20 km) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Max Slope | |Max Slope | ||
|Approx. | |Approx. 10% | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Traversable Terrain | |Traversable Terrain | ||
Line 35: | Line 43: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Storage Temperature | |Storage Temperature | ||
| | | -4–122°F (-20–50°C) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|IP Rating | |IP Rating | ||
| | |IP54 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Charge Time | |Charge Time | ||
|Approx. | |Approx. 3.5h | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Battery Voltage | |Battery Voltage | ||
Line 53: | Line 61: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Battery Capacity | |Battery Capacity | ||
| | |5200 mAh / 187 Wh | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Motor Power | |Motor Power | ||
Line 59: | Line 67: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Charger Power | |Charger Power | ||
| | |71W | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Charger Current | |Charger Current | ||
| | |1.7A | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Shocks | |Shocks | ||
|Front only | |Front only | ||
|} | |} | ||
==Manuals== | ==Manuals== | ||
*[[File:NinebotES1ProductManual.pdf]] | *[[File:NinebotES1ProductManual.pdf]] | ||
*[[File: NinebotKickscooterSeriesManual.pdf]] | |||
==Modding== | |||
{{ESX-like CFW Support}} | |||
==Serial Prefix/Region== | |||
[[Category: Scooters]][[Category: Ninebot]] | [[Category: Scooters]][[Category: Ninebot]] |
Latest revision as of 19:12, 2 September 2023
The Ninebot ES1 is a budget scooter made by Ninebot.
It is the first of the "KickScooter" series also known as the KS or ES(Electric Scooter) series.
Attaching a NEB1002-H1 battery to an ES1 makes it into a Ninebot ES3.
This scooter was superseded by the Ninebot ES2.
The main page for guides relating to this model is at Ninebot ESX Stuff.
Specifications
Original specs via Segway.
Dimensions | Unfolded: Approx. 40 × 17 × 45 in (102 × 43 × 113 cm) Folded: Approx. 45 × 17 × 16 in (113 × 43 × 40 cm) |
Net Weight | Approx. 24.9 lbs (11.3 kg) |
Rider Weight | 55–220 lbs (25–100 kg) |
Max Speed | Approx. 12.4 mph (20 km/h) |
Advertised Range | Approx. 15.5 miles (20 km) |
Max Slope | Approx. 10% |
Traversable Terrain | Asphalt/flat pavement; obstacles < 0.4 in (1 cm); gaps < 1.2 in (3 cm) |
Operating Temperature | 14–104°F (-10–40°C) |
Storage Temperature | -4–122°F (-20–50°C) |
IP Rating | IP54 |
Charge Time | Approx. 3.5h |
Battery Voltage | 36 VDC |
Charging Voltage | 42 VDC |
Charging Temperature | 32–104°F (0–40°C) |
Battery Capacity | 5200 mAh / 187 Wh |
Motor Power | 250W |
Charger Power | 71W |
Charger Current | 1.7A |
Shocks | Front only |
Manuals
Modding
This model has custom firmware support from ScooterHacking.
The Custom Firmware Generator can be found here.
Once converted, CFW can be generated and flashed using the guides below:
CFW usually refers to custom firmware for the ESC or DRV, though there are some CFW versions for BLE and BMS.
ScooterHacking's SHFW also supports this model.
ScooterHacking features more in-depth information on this model on their ESX Wiki Page.