Burgerman wrote:Keep posting voltage graphs and Ah.
Burgerman wrote:Computer went to sleep? Or USB did. Or something. Keep going.
Scooterman wrote:It’ll finish any minute now Terry. See how steep the graph is dropping
expresso wrote:very nice you got what i expected - which is great - alot of AH you have there 168ah - - our of 176ah spec. its pretty good - less than 10ah difference which i would consider great - its a pattern i been seeing with all these Cells - so far - 3 sets of Cells -- all showed the same very similar -
i would say what ever Cell you find - what ever Spec they rate it at - just remove 10ah and the Cells should give you no less than the rated spec minus 10ah - i would consider that very good -you should have nothing to worry about - if anything - then its the connections
how long did it take 2 days nights ?
expresso wrote:i had to return 100ah Cells i received damaged - but i managed to test one and was happy with the results - if all of them tested the same - would be the best you can get at the moment - Cells were very clean new looking - glad the seller is doing a good job with this and fedex took them on monday - so its out of my hands - just wait now -
i managed to test fit them in my battery tray - and i am pretty sure i can fit 16 - so when this is resolved - i will get an extra 8 along with the 8 i paid for and take my time making a good solid 200ah pack over the winter - no rush - no chair yet to use them in - i just love the size of them makes it work and cost also very good -
if all good i should get 180ah out of these cells -
terry2 wrote:
I hate the aluminium threads in the cells
terry2 wrote:I am recharging my pack and I noticed that 1 thread is half stripped.
Can these cells be helicoid?
expresso wrote:terry2 wrote:I am recharging my pack and I noticed that 1 thread is half stripped.
Can these cells be helicoid?
check them all - i found 4 of them on my pack that way - that could and will cause problems - mines worked fine a short while then when going to recharge - it wouldnt see half the pack - pl8 error etc, - and it turned out to be the connections only - adding locktite makes me worry also because it will get inside and that can make bad connection also if too much is used - as bad as it may sound - i think a touch of locktite only very little but lockwashers also -
what size screw did you use - how long - i ended up using 10mm on some with the lockwashers - 8mm on the others with out - depends how thick our ring connectors are also - if i have to redo it - i would use all lockwashers - locktite just a touch and 10mm long - and screw down good enough - this will depend also on the cells - can be different for mines - depends how deep they make the trend - its a learning process with these kind of cells -
expresso wrote:check to be sure its just the one - i found 3 at first and then when i double checked - found one more which i though was good before - while you have it out or working it on - just takes a little time - or else if you feel its good - dont worry - if you have the room to add the grub screws - i think thats good because then you dont have to touch it again - locktite it down and then screw down without worry -
i wont have the room when i do mines - - lets see what BM suggests - i dont want to suggest something that wont be good - one set of Cells i have 60ah - has top posts that are steel and you screw down over them - Not in them like we have now - those i would love - but take up too much room - cant use too tall
you can try some locktite now and lockwasher with a longer screw on that one cell you feel its loose - i used a 10mm long - and it seems to lock down nicely with a lockwasher - no locktite this time around. will it hold - only time will tell me - i only used it twice since i fixed it -
Scooterman wrote:terry2 wrote:
I hate the aluminium threads in the cells
Aluminium is a good conductor.
I guess they're made that way so it's easy to link many cells with bus bars for huge solar or marine (luxury yaught) lifepo4 packs?
Sorry, i can't spell yaught![]()
snaker wrote:@terry2: the discharge graph of your park is perfect. Why do not you enjoy it by driving a 'mad' trip until you or your pack is completely drained

Scooterman wrote:And remember you can always give the bolt a tweak second time around or the next day. I find that especially in soft materials that connections tend to 'settle', so it's worth going round the pack again a few hours later or the following day. And definitely after you've been foe a test run over some bumpy ground.
Also for them aluminium terminals i like using the screwdriver handle attachment on a 10mm 1/4" drive socket. I think it gives you more feel and you don't particularly need the leverage a ratchet provides. Although if you grip the ratchet head it gives you good feel.
Also i wrap metal tools in insulating tape for the batteries, i too much of a butterfingers
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