http://www.wheelchairdriver.com/these.pdf are what I really want x8
steves1977uk wrote:Yup, the PL8v2 will always be recommended for charging Lithium batteries. It will take years for a plug'n'play solution to be developed.
Steve
Burgerman wrote:Its already been done. But its the WRONG solution. Its fundamentally the wrong thing to do and at the wrong place. Unless your only interest is in being able to sell lithium batteries (cells) to a bunch of clueless DIYers in a way that means you don't get almost all returned as "faulty" through ignorance...
Burgerman wrote:Thats not a BMS as such, or rather it is but all it does is control charge and cell balance (badly) on a solar array..
Burgerman wrote:Dont have time so this is far too simple. But...
BMS has 2 jobs. We will split them up.
Cell use protection.
Cell charge protection. (More later... But to be effective it must be able to control charger output too)
Cell use protection.
It cuts power like a switch (disconnects) if you do any of these:
Over an arbitrary current limit.
Low voltage limit.
Over voltage on say regeneration.
The value of these things is debatable, We don't want any of them! Since it doesn't control them, but switches power OFF! It depends on cell type, actual load, etc. (for eg it may cut out as you try to climb a curb or turn on grass due to over current, or because the extra current causes a temporary voltage drop. So they are always wrong. If ANY of these things trip, then the cells are undersized for the system, and or the CONTROL SYSTEM on your chair is not correctly programmed. As its this that should be monitoring voltages and current and PROPORTIONALLY reducing current or load as needed proportionally, or telling the user the battery is low. You don't want to stop dead crossing a rail line or getting on a bus!
Likewise for the charging. That requires a better proportional control system, proportional balance, and a much higher balance current than any generic BMS gives. Not a digital on/off charger/balancer. In a properly implemented system it would not ever do anything. If it did, you already have other problems.
steves1977uk wrote:https://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=63863 Not as simple as you think terry...
Steve
I believe a small computer can take charge of charging and monitoring the system. And using Arduino is great as it's very easy to program.
In other words it will use the same kind of chargers\balancers but the computer will be in charge. The Arduino forums have some good posts.
A monitor has already been dun for lithium.

Gnomatic wrote:After my mishap, I completely tore down the pack, and removed the two cells that were compromised by scraping against bolts when I was doing a test fit a couple weeks ago. I also took out a third cell that seemed it may have taken a bit of abuse as well. Huge thanks to expresso for sending me a few replacement cells and orange blocks so I could bet the rebuild going much sooner than otherwise.
I individually tested a bunch of cells for capacity ect. Everything seemed fine. Reassembling the pack went much, much easier and smoother than when my friend and I initially put it together. This is all new territory for me, and there's no teacher like experience. Once assembled, I charged the pack, did a complete discharge to 2.9v, and then fully recharged it.
A little bit of bouncing around at the top of the first graph, maybe a little less pronounced than before. My charge cables are long so I'm chalking it up to that.
Ahrs returned seems fine I think.
So all this put me back two weeks, but all in all, I think the pack is better assembled than before. It really helps having some experience putting one of these together. I get my chair base back from the shop I took it to next week. All the bolts sticking above or inside the battery area have been ground off and welded in place so the inside of the battery area is snooth. I'll be lining the entire inside of the battery area with drawer liner, and also am wrapping the pack in rubber sheeting. At that point, I think I'll be ready to install the pack in the chair! (hopefully no sparks this time)
expresso wrote:
NIce - You Saved the day -thats great - got back in shape in 2 weeks time - i bet the graphs will get even better with time and using it daily etc, -
Burgerman wrote:If you only need it for charging, thats a small part of its function. Various charge controllers are available for that.
And you could do that. Is it bad? Well that all depends! On a perfectly built and regularly checked (by PL8? ) pack it wouldn't do that much harm. But if for eg a cell was far out of balance it would rapidly get worse or hold every cell at a high CV voltage for 8, 16, or days till its weedy balance circuit fixed it. During this time it switches charge power on/off repeatedly bouncing the high cells up and down over and over... And of course you wouldn't know anything was wrong.
But remember that your dumb charger and BMS will be no smaller or simpler than a PL8 unless its also only the same power as your typical mobility charger. And that wont do! So I dont see any real gain.
Burgerman wrote:
If you are happy with a low power charger, like the 8A type you are used to, then an 8S all in one plug into the wall hobby charger could be used.
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