- My motor will handle up through 72v nominal. [more voltage equals more Watt~hours! and More RPM per Ah~ But no increase in thrust]
- And why not use a slightly higher capacity battery? Lower discharge rate? Steeper price-increase curve?
- 14p x 2.9a= 40.6a [maximum output] output for each parallel pack
- at 60volts nominal = 224 cells = 2403.52Wh at 3.7volts each cell.
- 16s x 14p x 10.73Wh per cell = 2403.52 Wh [at 3.7v]
- Calculate “Ah” (amp-hours): Volts ÷ Watt-hours = Amp-hours [2403.52Wh {divide by} 60v = 40 Ah Amp-hour pack]
- My battery compartment is a tight 11 inches wide by 7 inches by 10 inches tall = 224 cells. 231 cells would fit perfectly so I can use the 224cells, but I need to measure the holders. I think the holders are less than one square inch per cell. So there will be room to breathe.
battery size for large cycle truck |
made by EM3EV.COM
ebikes.ca/tools/trip-simulator
Essential knowledge about lithium-ion batterys [click it]
The INR prefix is generally regarded as designating that a cell chemistry is “NCA” or Nickel Cobalt Aluminum. This is what Tesla uses (but…there are also several variations on the NCA recipe). The NCR prefix is the “NCM” chemistry, Nickel Cobalt Manganese. Listed below are the recently popular high-capacity cells on the market.10A, 3.5-Ah, NCR18650GA Panasonic / Sanyo
10A, 3.5-Ah, INR1865035E Samsung
keep state of charge in a band of around 20% to 80% whenever possible for max cycle life. |
Lithium-ion batteries do not like to be too full or too empty. So when calculating how many amp hours you need under stand that you need at least twice the total capacity of the pack. And due to the fact that these battery's capacity will go down over the life span, you should start with at least four times the amp hours that you need what you need.
You
need a programmable
controller to change the cut of voltage.
30%
of 58.8v = 17.64v but
my controller cuts off at about 39v which is
66.326% of 58.8v
yet
39v is 30.7% of 78.8v
|
The only way to compare two different voltages is to simulate them at the same wattage needed for the some job. Or simulate for the same grade etc. Then look at the amperage to see if the motor and batteries will stay cool enough. http://www.ebikes.ca/learn/power-ratings.html
You could play around with different amperage settings, but be sure to check the load line and the grade.
Yes the larger battery will run cooler as its 7P where the 15.5ah is 5p
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/discharging_at_high_and_low_temperatures
Charging at 5 amps is almost too fast for a 10 Amp-hour battery, but...not so fast for a 20 Amp-hour battery. When you charge your battery fast, all the time it will greatly reduce your batteries life expectancy. We recommend you stick to slow charging (4 hours or more) or go with a charger that can switch between fast and slow charges like the Luna Charger.
If you don't want to spend a bunch of money on a CycleAnalyst or a cheaper meter for your e bike, just get an accelerator that has a voltmeter. Watching the voltage can tell you how much power you are using and how much you have left. And most importantly you want to keep the voltage above the cut-off point; it drops 5 or more volts when accelerating so a light touch can keep your vehicle from shutting down.
How to calculate cells needed for pack
LiFePo4 26650 cells (3300 mAh = 3.3Amp hours) x 3.2volts per cell = 10.56Ah [but the sellers say it's only good for 10Ah].... 2000 Watt hours ÷ 10Wh cells = 200 [12 p {in perallel} x 16s {in series} = 192 cells] x 6.75@ = $1296 [or 13p x 16cells = 208 cells x $6.75 = $1404]........ [16 in series = 51.2 volts nominal or 59.2v full]
These 26650 cells will need a much larger space, like a box that can fit under the rear rack or box. And they last only little bit longer than the Samsung 29E cells? At around 2000 cycles. But you don't need to fuse each cell. But there is avast difeance between cells, so ask at CandlePower forum.
The controller should turn the The 29E pack off at 3 volts per cell 14 x 3 = 42volts. [Or at 2.5v = 35v / and 14 cells x 4.1v {90%} = 57.4v or 14 x 4volts {80%?) = 56volts]
But the LiFePo4 pack should turn off at 2.5v per cell?? x 16 cells = 40 volts and I think that the only way to make them last longer is to charge to 80% or 90% only.
Calculating watt-hours and milage
The right way to build a battery?:
Controllers
If you want to make a given Permanent Magnet motor [brushless] spin faster, you can either run it at a higher voltage, or keep the voltage the same and use a faster motor winding with fewer turns. The former approach will have your input electrical power at a higher voltage and lower current, while the latter would be at a lower voltage and higher current, but the total power (volts * amps) would be the same, as would the motor efficiency, heating, etc. However, the motor controller and external wiring can get hotter with the fast wind at lower voltage and higher current, unless you appropriately increase the wire gauge and mosfet resistance.
It takes power to climb hills, regardless of whether that is at a low voltage and high current or a high voltage and low current.
Battery amps has little to do with the amps actually flowing through a motor which is your phase current, and it's the phase amps responsible for controller heating and the motor heating. A lot of people fail to recognize this.
The motor controller is just a step down DC-DC converter, it can take a higher voltage battery and step that down to a lower voltage that is presented to the motor, and increase the current by the same proportion. So the controller can take 48V and 10A from your battery, and convert that into 24V at 20A flowing through the motor. That's exactly what a motor controller does, half throttle means that the motor is seeing only half the voltage of the battery, but in this state the amps flowing through the motor is double the current that you would see on the Cycle Analyst or other ammeter."
https://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=47478#p699140
“I've developed a super simple formula for finding a person's ideal battery size. It's hard to say how far a person will go per mile on each amp hour, how much pedaling they do, wind, rate of acceleration, bicycle, weight and so on, play a huge role in all of this. However, once you know your ideal battery size, multiply it by .43 and add that to the battery. So if 20ah is likely to get you to all the places you imagine going, multiply by .43 and add that number to the original number. So the math goes 20 times .43 is 8.6, 8.6 plus 20 is 28.6. Seeing as how there aren't too many 28.6 batteries, you'd round to 30ah. So you'd have a 30ah battery, this is part of the battery life extending magic occurs. I assume a tool like cycle-analyst would help with this, as I think it measures the consumed AH on the run. Multiply 30 by .7 and that will give you 70% of 30 or 21. Consume no more than 21ah and you'd be set, 21 would be your life extending level of discharge. You could go deeper, and slightly decrease the battery life if you really needed to and it wouldn't destroy the battery like discharging the battery to the dreaded 'lvc'. I think the reason for a123s greater lifespan (if that is true) is because if you abuse it, it'll survive, it won't get so hot when you discharge it so rapidly, and I think it might be able to handle deeper discharge better.”
https://www.instructables.com/EBike-Power-Meter/
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