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A review of the Levo Combi standing power-chair

Received by email, and with my reply...
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2004 6:37 PM
Subject: Here is my review or comments!
 


Hi John,
Been an admirer of your work since god knows when, back in the' good old' PB days!  (He means Performance Bikes Magazine - Ed.)
 
Do you mean BEFORE i landed in a wheelchair???   Thanks for the review!!!
 
I topped my spine @ T7 on Mad Sunday 2002 (bloody born-again biker swung into my path without indicating or looking; but no witnesses...).
Anyway, to the business in hand (so to speak). - Levo Combi standing power-chair.
 
I returned to work (Primary School teacher no less) part-time in January 2003 and built up to full-time by January 2004. I managed to get funding through Access to Work (Job Centre Plus) for a Levo Combi standing powerchair. I'd tried a Baldour, but hated the way that one handled; the front-wheel drive made the back-end fish-tail and I would have wiped out children's ankles right, left and centre.
 
They would soon learn to move???
Front wheel drive is only any use for people that stay indoors in BIG houses...  Its a useless setup at speed, or outdoors!
 
The day came and the rep gave me one hour of his precious time to take me through this fantastic new £14,500 beastie. It had centre-wheel steering for excellent manoeuvrability and sensitive enough controls to place it exactly where I wanted it to be. I had a tray to put a wireless keyboard / mouse on so that I could work from anywhere in the room.
At first the standing feature made me quite spastic, but it settled down when I became used to it and it has proven very beneficial from a physio point of view. It tilts in space and can recline fully so that, if I'm tired, I can get a quick 40 winks at lunchtime.
If the playground is wet and the tyres a bit worn it's possible to get it into a slide, which is fun.
It was all great for a while, but I started getting niggles with the thing. Bolts started working loose, a guard over a motor dropped off (I don't get the impression that it was any more than cosmetic anyway), it sheared a bracket supporting the backrest and then it suffered a series of occasional electrical faults. Recently it left me stranded in the middle of the playground; half an hour later it worked fine again.
The suppliers (Gerald Simmonds) were not overly enthusiastic about sorting problems and tended to make me feel as though I was being fussy; "It's like a new car, you're likely to get some teething troubles" they said, "But I've got a new car; it's been 100% reliable, has air-con, sports suspension, all the gadgets, cost me less than £10,000 and the dealer service has always been excellent!" I replied.
 
Isn't this ALWAYS the case?
 
At just over 12 months the batteries died, despite the Levo website saying that the batteries should last 3 years; at least Gerald Simmonds (begrudgingly) sent me replacement batteries for free.
 
Well that is to be expected (batteries dying).
SOME people (those that do not use the chair much or only use it for short distances) will get three to five years from powerchair batteries.
Others (you, and me! for example) will get 12 months or less!
Even the BEST deep cycle (Optima AGM, Odyssey AGM) batteries will only give around 300 cycles at a depth of discharge of 80%. 
Thats only ten months expected life.
It goes like this... 10 percent discharge daily = several 1000s of cycles or well over 3 years use.
20 percent and you get approx 1000 and 2.5 years
30 percent and you get say 750 and 2 years
it gets worse as you cycle the battery deeper! 
So 300 or 10 months is not unusual if you hammer the batteries daily at 80 percent average discharge!
You will get less than 1 month if you completely flatten them daily...
 
And leaving them in any condition other than fully charged for 24 hours or so causes sulphation...
So charge them as often as possible! Always every night, but also for an hour or so if you get chance during the day helps too.  Called opportunistic charging.  It helps lower the average depth of discharge and helps them live longer.
 
In summary it has been a god-send for me at work and , as far as I can tell, the best power-chair that stands you up on the market. It has been great to chase the children around the playing field with threats of "Last one in gets run over by a crip!" and so on.
If you can get one bought for you, great, but the price-tag is horrendous for what you actually get (but isn't that always the way for stuff for 'the disabled').
 
All the beast,
Chris Selway.

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