That’s not true. You won’t even know that the battery is balancing during the charging. Depending on how low your battery is, your charging time will vary.I don't have an ebike yet. I've heard that properly balancing a pack can take all night. True? Thx!
,.. The longer time at the end of the charge cycle is not the balancing but rather the caution of the charging system which requires more precision to avoid overheating and degradation.
Don't think there is any way to check current flow on my setup. How long should a guy leave them charging after the green light goes on using a 3.5a charger on a 20a and 15a 72v battery pack? For the most part I leave them at less than 80%, but occasionally do a full charge, intentionally or by mistakeWhen a charger reaches maximum voltage (54.6V on my 48V batteries), it switches from constant voltage to constant current charging.
The light turns green on most chargers at that point, but that doesn't mean the battery is fully charged.
The voltage is maintained at 54.6, and the current flow starts dropping, so the battery is no longer charging at the full rated output current of the battery charger.
It can take a Long time for the current to trickle down to 0 amps.
I charge my batteries to 51.6 volts after my ride then top them up to 54.6 volts before my next ride.
It takes about an hour for my chargers to get to 54.6 volts and switch to constant current, then it takes well over an hour to finish a full charge.
If I unplug my 3 amp charger as soon as the green light comes on, my battery voltage is only ~53.1 volts.
It's the same thing as voltage sag with a battery under load, but in reverse.
Voltage surge I guess you could call it.
The faster you charge a battery (4 or 5 amps) the sooner it will get to 54.6 V but the longer it will take to fully charge the battery after it switches to constant current.
Hopefully the 54.6 volts are equally shared at 4.2 volts across all 13 cell groups, but that all depends on the BMS and whether or not it prevents all cell groups from exceeding 4.2 volts, or if it only monitors the 54.6 volt total.
One or more bad cell groups that don't fully charge can increase the voltage of the good cell groups, then things can become dangerous.
That's where buying a quality battery with quality cells goes a long way towards safety.
No... The cells in parallel are monitored as one because they act as a single cell. So a 48v/13S battery pack has 13 monitoring leads.PCeBiker I agree, the most important thing is that all cells must be the same from the start. If there is a 48v BMS that manages each cell separately, that's new to me, let's say 52, 65 wires maybe more. Does it exist?
I don't agree with leaving the battery charging after the light turns green for an extended period without clear manufacture instruction or testing as you need to know what your hardware is doing during this time. You could be unnecessarily stressing your battery or you can just be wasting your time.Don't think there is any way to check current flow on my setup. How long should a guy leave them charging after the green light goes on using a 3.5a charger on a 20a and 15a 72v battery pack? For the most part I leave them at less than 80%, but occasionally do a full charge, intentionally or by mistake![]()
You have it a little backwards.When a charger reaches maximum voltage (54.6V on my 48V batteries), it switches from constant voltage to constant current charging.
The light turns green on most chargers at that point, but that doesn't mean the battery is fully charged.
The voltage is maintained at 54.6, and the current flow starts dropping, so the battery is no longer charging at the full rated output current of the battery charger.
It can take a Long time for the current to trickle down to 0 amps.
I charge my batteries to 51.6 volts after my ride then top them up to 54.6 volts before my next ride.
It takes about an hour for my chargers to get to 54.6 volts and switch to constant current, then it takes well over an hour to finish a full charge.
If I unplug my 3 amp charger as soon as the green light comes on, my battery voltage is only ~53.1 volts.
It's the same thing as voltage sag with a battery under load, but in reverse.
Voltage surge I guess you could call it.
The faster you charge a battery (4 or 5 amps) the sooner it will get to 54.6 V but the longer it will take to fully charge the battery after it switches to constant current.
Hopefully the 54.6 volts are equally shared at 4.2 volts across all 13 cell groups, but that all depends on the BMS and whether or not it prevents all cell groups from exceeding 4.2 volts, or if it only monitors the 54.6 volt total.
One or more bad cell groups that don't fully charge can increase the voltage of the good cell groups, then things can become dangerous.
That's where buying a quality battery with quality cells goes a long way towards safety.
You have it a little backwards.
First phase of charging is CC- Constant Current and as it reaches Full Charge Voltage it changes to CV-Constant Voltage as it slowly ramps down current.
That vado before coffee will get you every time! View attachment 199814
Don't think there is any way to check current flow on my setup.
I'm just blown away by the ridiculous amount of misinformation and the continued repeating of assumptive science on this subject... smh...