excerpted from a email from Justin of last November:
...As an intermediate, we do have a new stock of the 8Ah NiCad packs in
too, which are cheaper per watt/hr than NiMH and about 45% lighter than
PbA. So if your budget is tight this can also be an attractive option.
Their internal resistance is about 10mOhm / cell though.
Hullo Knoxie and all
I would like to know what to expect in the way of voltage sag from NiMH in particular.
If I get the BatterySpace 24V pack (ideally, two of them for series/parallel running of my Currie bike), what will be the voltage sag say 15 amps from a single 24V pack? Will the series resistance of NiMH cells increase with age?
These are Nexcell brand. From Battery Space.com:

Impedence of this battery pack is less than 250 mohm, and the Max discharging rate is 40Amp
What they don't say is what the typical total series resistance may be. A quarter ohm at 30 amps = what? A seven volt loss,
for instance, if I choose to try a single BS24V pack at first, I might have a seven volt drop under high loads? I don't have seven volts sag at present, even with two tired-out SLA bricks.
---
In emails of last December, Justin noted when I asked of his pack, vs, BS's pack above,
.25 ohms on a 24V pack isn't that great, ~12mOhm / cell. The 'D' NiMH
packs we get from Nexcell have about 8 mOhm / cell. Their 2D 18Ah packs
are about 5.5 mOhm / cell.
If you series connect them to 48V on your nominally 24V setup, then
series resistance is not really a worry. You have way more voltage on
hand to make any IR losses irrelevant as far as the ebike performance is concerned....
BS's own data for their NiCad cells seems to confirm that NiCad from them, at least, is not good for high-current work (over 15amps).
So--I dunno. I would love to learn (knightmb) what you see in voltage sag from you BS 12AH packs, at various current draws like 10, 15, 30A?
Is that data on hand?
Thanks for advice,
Reid