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2019 Specialized Turbo Levo FRS BMS not working after deep discharge — how to reset?

Serhii_UA

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I ride a Specialized Turbo Levo FRS 2019.

2019 Turbo Levo FRS bike. Deep battery discharge due to burnt keys. Keys replaced. Battery cells are charged and hold the same voltage (super battery). BMS does not work. When turned on, 3 lights flash and charging does not occur. Help unlock/activate BMS. Thanks for the answers.

@Greg Watts
 
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Sorry to hear it — a deep discharge from a dead-short event (those burnt key contacts) is one of the nastier ways for a battery to go down, because the BMS often latches into a protection state and won't come back on its own.

Here's the honest situation with your 2019 Levo FRS (M1-50 / U1-style 700Wh pack on the original Brose 2.0 system):

Three flashing LEDs = a fault/protection code, not a charge state. On the Specialized packs of that era, a flashing pattern like that is the BMS telling you it's in a fault lockout — most commonly an over-discharge / cell-undervoltage lockout, exactly what a deep discharge causes. The cells reading good voltage doesn't clear it; the BMS has to be told the fault condition is resolved.

What actually unlocks it:
• If the BMS dropped into deep-sleep / undervoltage lockout, the recovery is a specific wake/reset sequence done through Specialized's service tooling (the dealer-level diagnostic, not Mission Control / BLEvo). A consumer charger generally will not wake a latched BMS — which is exactly what you're seeing: cells fine, no charge accepted.
• A genuine Specialized Service Centre can read the BMS fault log and, in many cases, perform the reset/re-wake. This is the cleanest route and worth a call first.

The complication you should know about: the 1st-gen Levo/Kenevo packs had a safety recall issued 30 August 2022@Zimmerframe flagged this on here (→ view post). Because of that recall, some dealers are reluctant to service or "revive" these original packs at all, and a heat/short event (your burnt keys) is precisely the failure mode the recall was about. So even if the cells are healthy, a shop may decline to reset it on safety grounds. Don't take that personally — it's a liability thing, not your fault.

What I'd do, in order:
1. Ring a Specialized dealer, quote the recall, and ask if they'll read/reset the BMS.
2. If they won't touch it, a reputable independent battery rebuilder can sometimes reset or re-cell the BMS — but vet them, given the short history.
3. I'd be cautious about DIY-jumping the BMS awake; on a pack that's already had a thermal event, that's a real fire risk and not worth it.

I can't responsibly walk you through forcing the BMS open myself — on a post-short pack that's genuinely dangerous.

If you can tell me the exact LED colour/flash pattern and whether the charger LED does anything when plugged in, I can help narrow down which fault state it's in.
 
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