Gary Shannon
New Member
I'm building a cargo trike from a Schwinn Meridian. My enclosed cargo box will hold two battery packs, 18 volts each, flat against the left and right inside walls. I wanted the batteries to be as flat as possible, instead of the usual "boxy chunk" battery packs. So here's what I'm trying:
To connect the batteries without soldering or welding, I'm using aluminum angle pieces as bus bars:
On the side of the busbar that touches the positive terminal I punched a "pimple" that sticks out far enough to make good contact with the positive end of the battery. I filed each pimple flat to give a better area of contact.
On the negative end of the battery, to put "spring tension" on the battery, I wrapped a piece of thick, rigid plastic foam (kindly provided by Schwinn in the box my Meridian came packed in) in several layers of aluminum foil. Pushing the battery into place compresses the foam and makes a very tight contact. Each parallel row of cells is held down by an aluminum strap over a piece of foam plastic.
Fully loaded with terminals for balance leads. A mirror-image pack will go on the opposite wall of the cargo box.
To connect the batteries without soldering or welding, I'm using aluminum angle pieces as bus bars:
On the side of the busbar that touches the positive terminal I punched a "pimple" that sticks out far enough to make good contact with the positive end of the battery. I filed each pimple flat to give a better area of contact.
On the negative end of the battery, to put "spring tension" on the battery, I wrapped a piece of thick, rigid plastic foam (kindly provided by Schwinn in the box my Meridian came packed in) in several layers of aluminum foil. Pushing the battery into place compresses the foam and makes a very tight contact. Each parallel row of cells is held down by an aluminum strap over a piece of foam plastic.
Fully loaded with terminals for balance leads. A mirror-image pack will go on the opposite wall of the cargo box.