
SamTexas wrote:I have heard so much about the incredible self-balancing property of 18650v (apparently used in Makita packs) . Does anyone know where I can get a manufacturer's data sheet that describes that property? Thanks.
Sam




CamLight wrote:Umm...because they don't self-balance?



Doctorbass wrote:I dont know why people sday they self balance... it'S not the afct...
They just DONT NEED balancing..






SamTexas wrote:I have heard so much about the incredible self-balancing property of 18650v (apparently used in Makita packs) . Does anyone know where I can get a manufacturer's data sheet that describes that property? Thanks.
Sam
Edit: Original thread title changed: "Data sheet for SELF-BALANCING 18650V"


Doctorbass wrote:SamTexas wrote:I have heard so much about the incredible self-balancing property of 18650v (apparently used in Makita packs) . Does anyone know where I can get a manufacturer's data sheet that describes that property? Thanks.
Sam
Edit: Original thread title changed: "Data sheet for SELF-BALANCING 18650V"
You should remane your thread again...
In the industry these cells generally are NOT used with any balancer.. BionX and Makita are some of them
Few month ago Makita began to install cell monitoring on their pack to try increasing the life and refuce the deffecitve pack. Thanks John in Cr for mentioning that. I also got few of these new gen packs but from now had no time to test them as hard as i tested the most known gen.
Plus the experience of over 200-300 users of these makita on the E-S that dont use balancing feature is a valuable data.
The real history about " self balancing".. came from the fact that these big known manufactur DONT use balancer in their batteri desing.
What LFP said make sense to me.
no real need to search further...


John in CR wrote:When a pack gets out of balance after a deep discharge, then you charge/discharge conservatively for a number of cycles, and the pack gets back into good balance, what do you call it other than self-balancing?

CamLight wrote:John in CR wrote:When a pack gets out of balance after a deep discharge, then you charge/discharge conservatively for a number of cycles, and the pack gets back into good balance, what do you call it other than self-balancing?
The pack was never out of balance.
The cells are just at different voltage levels because of differences in SOC between them. Bring them all back to the same SOC and they're at the same voltage (assuming relatively good condition cells, blah, blah, blah).
If there's some sort of self-balancing going on then it shouldn't need cycling to occur. The cells would somehow "see" each other and just go ahead and balance themselves. That is, wiring a 25% SOC cell into a group of 100% SOC cells should result in a pack that has cells all at the same voltage after letting them sit. That won't happen, even with cycling the pack.

CamLight wrote:John in CR wrote:When a pack gets out of balance after a deep discharge, then you charge/discharge conservatively for a number of cycles, and the pack gets back into good balance, what do you call it other than self-balancing?
The pack was never out of balance.
The cells are just at different voltage levels because of differences in SOC between them. Bring them all back to the same SOC and they're at the same voltage (assuming relatively good condition cells, blah, blah, blah).
If there's some sort of self-balancing going on then it shouldn't need cycling to occur. The cells would somehow "see" each other and just go ahead and balance themselves. That is, wiring a 25% SOC cell into a group of 100% SOC cells should result in a pack that has cells all at the same voltage after letting them sit. That won't happen, even with cycling the pack.

John in CR wrote:LFP already explained the mechanism, so why still argue? These Konion packs definitely get out of whack from very deep discharges just like with other lithium chemistries, and they don't return to balance at top of charge on the first recharge. It's not just a voltage difference between the cells at the bottom SOC, and the self balancing charge effect isn't strong enough to self balance charge the first go round.

liveforphysics wrote:Nope, perfectly matched brand new cells, at different states charge, will self balance after enough charge cycles with the spinel chemistries. They decrease charge energy efficiency and shed it as heat once they get above 4.1-4.2v or so. This makes the cells that were below this threshold get a bit of catch-up on each charge cycle until the pack finds balance.


liveforphysics wrote:CamLight wrote:John in CR wrote:When a pack gets out of balance after a deep discharge, then you charge/discharge conservatively for a number of cycles, and the pack gets back into good balance, what do you call it other than self-balancing?
The pack was never out of balance.
The cells are just at different voltage levels because of differences in SOC between them. Bring them all back to the same SOC and they're at the same voltage (assuming relatively good condition cells, blah, blah, blah).
If there's some sort of self-balancing going on then it shouldn't need cycling to occur. The cells would somehow "see" each other and just go ahead and balance themselves. That is, wiring a 25% SOC cell into a group of 100% SOC cells should result in a pack that has cells all at the same voltage after letting them sit. That won't happen, even with cycling the pack.
Nope, perfectly matched brand new cells, at different states charge, will self balance after enough charge cycles with the spinel chemistries. They decrease charge energy efficiency and shed it as heat once they get above 4.1-4.2v or so. This makes the cells that were below this threshold get a bit of catch-up on each charge cycle until the pack finds balance.

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