Soldering is a bad idea. Hopefully you found one of the two welders on endless-sphere. Next I wouldn’t bother with anything less than 10s 3p. Less than ep cells will be a saggy battery with any decent output controller. The Sunnko welders can be a coin toss, and the wrong source of cells could saddle you with fake rewrap cells. I have several welders, and they work well. Although one is about to be shipped back to Germany for an important update/fix. Get Micah Toll’s battery building book on Amazon. It’ll save the day. It appears from reading posts you still have some ground to cover. Good luck, and enjoy the adventure!
i'm not getting a decent controller, just like what came with the bike i'm gonna throw a cheap ebike kit at it. keep in mind that i'm not expecting to make some sort of high performance thing, and my commute even on this bike is about ten minutes both ways. this is just the start of a hobby and getting the basics set up.
i also don't intend to soldier the batteries, a sunkko spot welder with decent opinions from youtube users is only about 150 bucks on amazon, and it is a tool that i intend to use more, thus why i am planning to get set up to make batteries instead of just buying a battery pack. just pricing from amazon with all the parts i can think of to make a 10s2p battery is about 430 bucks, i'm adding 200 on top of that in my mind just for unknowns, and the battery itself is only around 150-190 of that. to buy the battery i am making new it is about 350 to 400, and i'm going to want more of them over time because: hobby. so it is allot cheaper for me to just get set up to make batteries the proper way.
EDIT: on the soldiering i was just talking about if i could get the cells out of my battery without destroying them i would be willing to risk soldiering three more on instead of having all the equipment to actually make a battery. either way i still intend to get the equipment, because i am still going to need MORE battery packs, and buying them instead of making them is dumb unless you need the convenience from everything i have managed to figure out. and once again: hobby. computers have been my hobby for decades, but prices on graphics cards are completely untenable right now so i gotta diversify. i don't make much but i don't spend much either, leaves me with a bit of disposable income that tends to go into whatever hobby i'm messing with at the time.
also, on the sunkko welders, i've seen the inside, i could rebuild the whole thing if i needed to, it isn't complicated. once again: hobby. every problem i run into is just more fun for me to figure out. oh, and the biggest complaint on the sunkko welders no matter where you go are people blowing their breakers because they think they can run them on a 15 amp breaker. long story short: they can't.
also i'm gonna be buying every part i can source on amazon, while you can end up with bogus crap on amazon for sure, you can also ruin a seller who sells that bogus crap on amazon pretty easily. means the bogus crap isn't that common unless you intentionally look for it. i'm not gonna thermally test the 30qs i get, i'm just gonna check their voltages, put the battery together with the bms, and let the bms do it's job. next set of tools will allow for real cell testing.
battery building is just a skill i've never needed to put in my back pocket, so while i know how to do it, i haven't done it. so i don't have the "skill" just the knowledge of how.
the question in this thread was if i was the only person who noticed that it is WAY cheaper in the long run to set up to properly build batteries than to just buy them, like exponentially cheaper, like so cheap that the batteries have to be called overpriced.
and my pricing is a hair different than the original post because i went ahead and added 10 more 18650s, this is all preliminary research so nothing is set in stone, just like i started researching ebikes about this time last year, and ultimately decided to go with what looked like a reasonable but cheap fully built ebike to start, i am now thinking over things on how i am going to turn that frame (forget about the bike) into what i actually want, i don't expect that to be a thing for a couple years, because while i have a little disposable income, it is still just a little, but my computer has a direct lineage to the year 2000 and a used 486 and is now pretty beast other than the gpu, that is called a hobby.