A different approach to battery management...

nomad85 said:
Gary, will these work with 5s packs? I just ordered 9 of them :mrgreen:
Are these (parallel boards and charge limiter) parts of the bms or is everything separate?

Yes, the 6s version will work with 5s, with the proper adapters. Actually, I may just also do a 5s version, by only populating 5 channels on the 6s board, but I'll have to get some more connectors.

The full BMS is made up of three functional parts, LVC/HVC detection, charge controller logic and shunt-type balancing. The LVC/HVC and balancing logic are combined on one 3" x 4" board (6 channels per board...), and the charge controller is on a separate 3" x 4" board. All of these boards are then stacked together.

With LiPo-based setups, most of the time balancing is only required on an infrequent basis, like maybe once every 10 cycles, or so. That being the case, we can split out the various BMS elements, and only install on the bike what is necessary, which in this case is the LVC/HVC logic. What I've done, to save space, is also include a parallel adapter, for the balance plugs. These boards can be "buried", within the completed pack. I've also taken the 2nd BMS element, the charge controller, and put it in its own small box. This is smaller than the version that is on the full BMS, because without the balancing function, we don't need the shutoff timer logic. In its place is logic that shuts off the charging when the current drops below about 180mA.

The "output" of the LVC/HVC boards is the simple isolated two-wire opto signal. The opto outputs from each LVC/HVC board are connected together in parallel. I use small JST-BEC pigtails for connecting this opto signal into the brake input on the controller. I also use one on the charge controller. The way this works is you hook the charge controller unit in series with the supply, and plug the BEC plug from the pack into a matching one coming from the charge controller. There is a trimpot on the charge controller PCB that s used to set the max charge current you want. For my unmodified Meanwell S-350-24 350W/24V supplies, I set the current to 13.5A. This only has to be done once, assuming you don't change supplies. Anyway, once everything is connected, you just press the "Start" button. The LED will start out red, while in the CC mode. Once the cells start hitting the HVC point, the PWM "throttling" will begin, which keeps all the cells from ever going above about 4.16V. It's like having individual cell CV modes. As the throttling starts, the LED will be orangish in color, and will transition to green, as the cells get full. When the current drops to about 180-200mA, the LED will be just about fully green. As I said above, once the current drops below 180mA, everything shuts down.

View attachment 18s2p LiPo Pack-05.jpg

When balancing is finally required, there are several options. You could use an RC-type balancer, like the HC Battery Medic, or a small balancing charger. That 4-in-1 unit Luke found the other day would work fine for this. My personal favorite is the Battery Medic. It has a nice big graphic display (am I the only one that has a hard time reading the tiny screens on the little CellLog widgets? :roll: :) ), and has both balancing and discharge modes. The latter allows you to pick a set voltage point you want the cells balanced to, like 4.10V, which is what I use. This is safer than the balance mode, which simply brings all the high cells down to the level of the lowest one. Occasionally, I've seen some units "overshoot" the low cell, and so it now becomes the low cell, and so on. The discharge mode doesn't do this. The cells all stop being discharged, once at the set point. Anyway, the only problem I have with the BMs is that with only about 200-300mA of balance current, it can take awhile to do a 10 or 15Ah pack. After some investigation, I determined it is pretty easy to tap into the balance circuits on these units, as they are on a separate PCB, mounted to the bottom of the main PCB, and do an external "booster", which adds another 1A+ of balance/shunt current. This worked so well, I've decided to make this BM booster available as well.

Again, since balancing is done "offline", and infrequently, you don't need a bunch of BM/booster combos. I've been using just one with my 18s2p and 24s3p packs. First I charge the pack, like normal. Then I hook the boosted BM up to each 6s section, one at a time. I check to make sure all the cells are above 4.10V, and then set the discharge mode to that point, and start it off. As the cell shunts are active, the LED on the booster for that channel lights up. In about 15-20 minutes, all the LEDs are off and it is finished. I then move on to the next 6s section. When finished, all the cells are sitting right at 4.10V. The max delta between lowest and highest I've seen is 4-5mA. Finally, I hook the charge controller back up, and do a quick "top-off" charge.

Anyway, back to work... :roll: :mrgreen:

-- Gary
 
Thanks for breaking that down Gary. I'd buy 4 5s parallel boards and a charge limiter right now. Maybe the battery medic booster, I did get one with my batteries.

Looks like the new parallel boards do not have the bullet connectors for the pack leads? What is the best way to parallel them?
 
nomad85 said:
Thanks for breaking that down Gary. I'd buy 4 5s parallel boards and a charge limiter right now. Maybe the battery medic booster, I did get one with my batteries.

Looks like the new parallel boards do not have the bullet connectors for the pack leads? What is the best way to parallel them?

Unfortunately, thee's no easy way to parallel the main pack leads on these. I wasn't happy with having the bullets on the same PCB, for two reasons. First, it really limits the options on where the LVC/HVC board can be mounted. About the only option is to orient the cells vertically, and mount the boards right on top of them. It makes crowded, having all the balance taps and the main pack connections right in the same space. the second reason is that it took me as long to solder the bullets to the PCB as it did to build the whole rest of the board, in short, a royal pain. :roll: What I did with my latest 18s2p pack was simply plugged the sub-packs in series, the positive of the 1st pack into the negative of the 2nd pack. and the positive of the 2nd into the negative of the third. Then I made two parallel harnesses that paralleled the two 18s1p strings at the main connections. I still have the cells paralleled, via the balance connectors plugging into the LVC/HVC boards, but you need to start with pairs of packs that are balanced to each other. I used my boosted BM to set all the packs to 4.10V, to start.

I'm hoping to finish updating my site, but I've run into one snag. I received my shipment of 18" long 18-gauge wires with crimped pins on both ends, from Keywin, but there was a mis-communication along the way and these ended up with the pins that go into the MicroFit receptacles, instead of the socket-type that go into the free-hanging plugs. I already have PCB-mountable versions of the receptacles, that I will use on the LVC/HVC boards, and on the Battery Medic Booster board. What I need is the cable between the two, with the free-hanging plugs on each end. This was going to be easy, with the pre-crimped wires, but now I need a "Plan B". Me crimping pins on these things is not going to happen. :) I'm trying everything to reduce the labor involved, so I can keep the assembled prices reasonable.

The boards are setup to mount either 7 or 9-pin MicroFit receptacles, or the 3.5mm mini-terminal blocks. I could use these on one end, which will cut the problem in half, but I need to figure out an easier solution for the other end.

-- Gary
 
GGoodrum said:
nomad85 said:
What I did with my latest 18s2p pack was simply plugged the sub-packs in series, the positive of the 1st pack into the negative of the 2nd pack. and the positive of the 2nd into the negative of the third. Then I made two parallel harnesses that paralleled the two 18s1p strings at the main connections. I still have the cells paralleled, via the balance connectors plugging into the LVC/HVC boards, but you need to start with pairs of packs that are balanced to each other. I used my boosted BM to set all the packs to 4.10V, to start.

I follow you for the most part here. I understand series connections. Are you using 3 lvc/hvc boards in the 18s2p pack? With 2 balance taps plugged into each. I dont quite understand how you are paralleling them you said you made up 2 harnesses, wouldn't it only require one harness to link the 2 18s strings?

A picture (or set of pictures) of how you made up the parallel harness would be great to see :mrgreen:

I really want to do this right as I need the pack to replace the ping battery I dropped and damaged, and I use my bike for all my transportation.

Thanks for everything!!
 
nomad85 said:
GGoodrum said:
nomad85 said:
What I did with my latest 18s2p pack was simply plugged the sub-packs in series, the positive of the 1st pack into the negative of the 2nd pack. and the positive of the 2nd into the negative of the third. Then I made two parallel harnesses that paralleled the two 18s1p strings at the main connections. I still have the cells paralleled, via the balance connectors plugging into the LVC/HVC boards, but you need to start with pairs of packs that are balanced to each other. I used my boosted BM to set all the packs to 4.10V, to start.

I follow you for the most part here. I understand series connections. Are you using 3 lvc/hvc boards in the 18s2p pack? With 2 balance taps plugged into each. I dont quite understand how you are paralleling them you said you made up 2 harnesses, wouldn't it only require one harness to link the 2 18s strings?

A picture (or set of pictures) of how you made up the parallel harness would be great to see :mrgreen:

I really want to do this right as I need the pack to replace the ping battery I dropped and damaged, and I use my bike for all my transportation.

Thanks for everything!!

What I did was simply take a short piece (1.5"...) of 10-gauge wire and soldered two 4mm bullets that wolud mate up with the two 18s string negative leads. I then added a black 10-gauge wire that ends up being the main pack negative lead, going to the big black Anderson connector. I also added a separate black 12-gauge wire, for charging. I then did the same thing for the positive side. Sorry, all this is buried inside the pack, and I didn't take any pics.

Yes, I'm using three LVC/HVC boards, with two balance plug connectors per board.

I tried to figure out a solution for the MicroFit cable issue, with the wrong gender pins, but there's just no easy solution that doesn't add a bunch of labor. I'm afraid I'm going to have to bite the bullet, and order another 100 sets of multi-colored 18-gauge wires, this time with the correct pins. In the meantime, I'll try and get the PCB-only options, up on my site. I'll hold off on the pre-assembled option until I can get the cabling issue sorted out. I'm also going to take another look at other ready-made options, if there are any.

-- Gary
 
GGoodrum said:
What I did was simply take a short piece (1.5"...) of 10-gauge wire and soldered two 4mm bullets that wolud mate up with the two 18s string negative leads. I then added a black 10-gauge wire that ends up being the main pack negative lead, going to the big black Anderson connector. I also added a separate black 12-gauge wire, for charging. I then did the same thing for the positive side.

Sorry I still can't visualize it. You use a short piece of 10g wire and put a bullet on each end, then... that would just be a bullet extender. :| Do you put 2 bullets on one end, splitting the wire between them, that would be easy enough it was safe to do.
 
nomad85 said:
Sorry I still can't visualize it. You use a short piece of 10g wire and put a bullet on each end, then... that would just be a bullet extender. :| Do you put 2 bullets on one end, splitting the wire between them, that would be easy enough it was safe to do.

I put the same kind of bullet connectors on both ends of a stripped piece of 10 AWG wire that is about 1.5" long, and then bend the wire in the middle. I then wrapped the ends of the long 10 AWG main pack lead, and the 12 AWG charge lead, around this bare middle section, and soldered it all together. The two bullet connectors plug into the negative bullets on each of the two 18s strings. I then did the same thing for the positive side.

-- Gary
 
Okay, after months of delays on the full BMS, which is still undergoing some more final "tweaks", I've been able to finally get the LVC/HVC - Charge Controller - Battery Medic Booster system option complete, and I've finished getting them initially up on my website. They can be ordered here: http://www.tppacks.com/products.asp?cat=26. I still need to finish the BOMs and post them up, which I will do tomorrow.

-- Gary
 
hi
Thats great we finally have it here, I'll have 4 of the LVC/HVC PCBs for starters.
What size are the BM Booster PCB and the Charge Current Limiter/Controller PCB in mm so we can see if we can find cases of our own.

How wide a voltage range will the Charge Current Limiter/Controller cover
eg.take two controllersto start with built up on the circuit board identicaly.
then can one be configured for charging a 10S lipo battery pack, with the correct voltage transformer I belive that would be about 41.5v.
the other configured for charging a 24S lipo battery pack a US favorite which would need a voltage of 99.6v

the two voltages I got by multiplying the max charge of each cell by the number of cells in the pack so since you charge to 4.15 per cell for the 10S that was 10x4.15=41.5 and for the 24S 24x4.15=99.6 I think I have my calculations correct I'm sure someone will correct me if I am wrong.

Geoff
 
A couple of clarifications... :)

The PCB-only options for both the Charge Controller and the Battery Medic include the custom end plates for the Hammond boxes. These will be part of the BOMs, which I will add this morning, but the the Charge Controller card fits in the smallest Hammond excluded aluminum case, model # 1455C801BK, and the Booster uses the next size up, the 1455J1201BK. Here's what the end plates look like:

View attachment End Plates-v4.0.7.png

The Charge Controller PCB is 50mm wide, and the Booster board is 75mm.


I will add 5s and 8s options for the LVC/HVC/Parallel Adapter boards this morning. The 5s will use the 6s board, but will have 5 channels populated, and will use 6-pin JST-XH connectors and 6-pin Molex Microfit connectors/extensions. The 8s version is a dedicated board size, and uses 9-pin JST-XH and MicroFit connectors.

In an effort to cut the labor time down, I'm not offering an assembled/tested option that includes 7-pin JST-XH pigtails, for the balancer output. For those wanting to use these with existing balancers, they can be added via the 3.5mm mini-terminal blocks. With the PCB-only version, the user can simply not order either the Molex connectors, or the mini-terminal blocks, and solder the 7-pin pigtails onto the boards.

More later...

-- Gary
 
Hi Gary,
I'm a newbie and getting ready to build my ebike. I'm planning on buying Matt's drive system with astro flight 3210 motor and hv100 controller. I'm looking to buy your products for battery/electronic side but I don't know what I need buy from you. I was wondering if you can assist with what I need. I am planning to make a 12s2p battery setup to get 44.4v and 10 ah with four Turnigy/Zippy 6s 5000mah lipo from hobbyking. I have not purchased any lipos or decided on a charger yet so any advice or suggestion would also be helpful.

For 12s2p battery set up, how many "Channel LVC/HVC + 4p Parallel Adapter" do i need? I'm planning on getting it "assembled/tested". what balancer output connection do I need? Molex 7-pin MicroFit or 3.5 Mini-Terminal Block?

I also plan to purchase the Charger current limiter/controller assembled/tested-w/case and battery medic booster assembled/tested-w/case.

You also stated previously, "This version of the control board also has the new charge current limiter, which is adjustable from about 1-20A. This means no more MeanWell hacks. Any version will work, even the ones that only have the front-end hiccup mode for overload protection." Since I have not purchase a charger yet, can I really purchase just any model of MeanWell power supply to charge or do I need a specific rating? Can I charge the whole battery pace at once or each battery pack individually. This would really be awesome and save me a lot of money :).

I also noticed that you example setup is 18s2p Lipo pack? Do you have any for sale as a complete set with batteries, lvc/hvc, charge current limiter/contrlloer, and battery medic booster? I would buy one in heartbeat :D

sorry for all the stupid questions and thanks in advance
 
visuthdy said:
Hi Gary,
I'm a newbie and getting ready to build my ebike. I'm planning on buying Matt's drive system with astro flight 3210 motor and hv100 controller. I'm looking to buy your products for battery/electronic side but I don't know what I need buy from you. I was wondering if you can assist with what I need. I am planning to make a 12s2p battery setup to get 44.4v and 10 ah with four Turnigy/Zippy 6s 5000mah lipo from hobbyking. I have not purchased any lipos or decided on a charger yet so any advice or suggestion would also be helpful.

For 12s2p battery set up, how many "Channel LVC/HVC + 4p Parallel Adapter" do i need? I'm planning on getting it "assembled/tested". what balancer output connection do I need? Molex 7-pin MicroFit or 3.5 Mini-Terminal Block?

I also plan to purchase the Charger current limiter/controller assembled/tested-w/case and battery medic booster assembled/tested-w/case.

You also stated previously, "This version of the control board also has the new charge current limiter, which is adjustable from about 1-20A. This means no more MeanWell hacks. Any version will work, even the ones that only have the front-end hiccup mode for overload protection." Since I have not purchase a charger yet, can I really purchase just any model of MeanWell power supply to charge or do I need a specific rating? Can I charge the whole battery pace at once or each battery pack individually. This would really be awesome and save me a lot of money :).

I also noticed that you example setup is 18s2p Lipo pack? Do you have any for sale as a complete set with batteries, lvc/hvc, charge current limiter/contrlloer, and battery medic booster? I would buy one in heartbeat :D

sorry for all the stupid questions and thanks in advance

As one wise sage once said, "there are no stupid questions, just stupid answers...". :wink: Welcome to Endless-Sphere. :)

After a number of email and PM questions, I've now simplified the balancer output options. Each assembled LVC/HVC board will come with a 7-pin 3.5mm mini-terminal block. There are now two options, you can either add a standard JST-XH 7-wire pigtail (6-wire for 5s...), for use with standard RC-type balancers, or balancing chargers, or you can add a 9" long 18 AWG silicon pigtail that has a 7-pin (6-pin for 5s...) MicroFit "receptacle" connector on the end. You would use the latter with the BM Booster.

For your 12s2p setup, you would need two LVC/HVC/Parallel Adapter boards, each with the MicroFit pigtail, one Charge Controller unit and one Battery Medic Booster. For charging, I would recommend any 48V Meanwell supply, like an S-350-48, or an SP-320-48. All you need to do is set the Charge Controller current limiter to about 6.5A. This only needs to be done once. And yes, you would be charging the whole pack at once. :)

Sorry, I don't have any ready-made packs for sale. Too many LiPo shipping restrictions right now.

Anyway, hope this helps.

-- Gary
 
visuthdy said:
For 12s2p battery set up?
GGoodrum said:
you would need two LVC/HVC/Parallel Adapter boards, one Charge Controller unit and one Battery Medic Booster..

Looks like you already sold out the Charge Controllers on your site,
but can you be nice and tell when you will get them again, please.

Ps.Thanks for asking Visuthdy and thanks for the knowledge GGoodrum.
 
I sold out the first batch, but I ordered more PCBs, which I should have by Wednesday. I went ahead and re-enabled the new batch on the site, with the caveat that they will ship "from 4/21/2010".

I've also added the BOM files, for those who are going the PCB-only route.

-- Gary
 
FYI:

I heard someone asking if they can use a pre-built 6S paralleling HVC/LVC board with 5S packs.
The way I do this is to slice the plastic housing on the board mount JST housings. All you have to do is double the width of the slot opposite the ground pin and you can then plug a 5S balance tap in there.

Works the other way too - you can always plug a 6S pack into a 5S tap by slicing a little more plastic.

Of course... You could just spend $0.24 and 10 minutes to solder in the correct board mount connector too. :p
Anyway - point is - if you have an odd-ball pack Gary's 6S board will probably work for just about anything 6S or less with some minor non-soldering mods.

-methods
 
methods said:
FYI:

I heard someone asking if they can use a pre-built 6S paralleling HVC/LVC board with 5S packs.
The way I do this is to slice the plastic housing on the board mount JST housings. All you have to do is double the width of the slot opposite the ground pin and you can then plug a 5S balance tap in there.

Works the other way too - you can always plug a 6S pack into a 5S tap by slicing a little more plastic.

Of course... You could just spend $0.24 and 10 minutes to solder in the correct board mount connector too. :p
Anyway - point is - if you have an odd-ball pack Gary's 6S board will probably work for just about anything 6S or less with some minor non-soldering mods.

-methods

That's a good tip. :) The reason I decided to offer the 5s version is that I already have a bunch of the 6-pin JST-XH board connectors, and I have more 6-wire (and 7-wire...) JST-XH pigtails coming today, for those wanting to use regular, "non-boosted" RC-type balancers.

-- Gary
 
I'm starting to get the documents complete, and posted up on the site. Here are the LVC/HVC operation and connection instructions. I'm also doing something similar for the Charger Controller and the Battery Medic Booster. I will post links to these as soon as I get them done. Part of the Charge Controller document will include a detailed connection diagram on how to use the new Charge Controller to replace the control section on the v2.x BMS boards. I know there are a couple of people waiting on this. :)

Tomorrow I will ship the orders that were "PCB-only". I'll then continue to do the assembled/tested versions, and ship them when complete, in the order I received them.

-- Gary
 
Gary,

With regards to the paralleling of discharge plugs...

I have already hand etched (heavy copper photo expose) single PCBs for paralleling 3 sets of 5S2P so a total of 12 male and female 3.5mm bullets coming off the PCBs... these worked very well as I had thick trace between them and also they were all firmly soldered into place...

My solution for shrouds to avoid shorts and ensure proper polarity was to cut the wire side collar off and then simply place them over mounted pairs of connectors... these were epoxied into place on the PCB (after being colored all black - yep with a laundry pen!).

The prototype board I ripped a week ago has a few additional enhancements which I added after the announcement of your MKS balancer extender or discharge enhancer... In addition it should integrate perfectly with your HVC/LVC and for that matter it will work wonders with your current limiter and some other features but most important to the world (until the full BMS v43943 is ready) this will also allow the easy integration of CellLog8s for use as HVC/LVC and for monitoring logging or even the old BM6... and since I find the MKS balancer displays to be unnerving, I have also added the ability to connect both the balancer and a monitor to each seperate 5S sub pack.

What makes this board different than my previous works... In addition to 4 x 4PST relays (12v coils, rated to 18V and 5A so at 5V it should be fine for 5-10A maximum) I also have 2 other types of relays which work in tandem with the above 5V ones... I have 2x60A/70A (I may have that backwards) 12v auto relays which seem fine at 60-45v range I run them in for coil head when active... they also consume very little current and I have beefed them up quite a bit... in addition they never see switching under load as their intention is to connect the 3x5S2P chunks into series for discharge (which is why only 2 of them, it breaks the connections between pack #3 (+) and pack #2 (-) and also pack #2 (+) and Pack #1 (-).

The remaining relays could be larger but they suffice for my present test situation... it's a pair of DPDT 12v30A relays... I couldn't find DPST in 30a with a 12v coil and low impedance and these were cheap... Normally they are disengaged, until the charger being connected engages them... once that happens, one relay connects all the positives together, the next connects the negatives together (yep with room for one more Parallel string to spare).

The final step is the balance leads being shifted from series to individual PCB type standoff plugs for monitoring each bank of 5S independently (with my CellLog8s for now) and also a balance connector for each port over to the first balance port connector in parallel...

The end result is simple: With the 15S pack, it does the rewiring from series to parallel (and defaults to isolated 5S packs without power to any of the relays - this provides a failure tolerance without sparks or expolsions) of the discharge and charge leads but also the balance taps!!!

Now a 15S pack can be charged / balanced to a high level of precision with a normal RC charger (when my iChargers work.. they will do a 5S pack at 10A so 2/3C rate or 1hr 33m average from empty to full), your BMS, modified or even normal MKS balancers... As it stands I could expand to 20S with the addition of just 1 x 4PDT 5v relay, 1 more 60A to break the parallel connection...

There are benefits and drawbacks to this method:
[Advantages]
1.) Since in default state the balance leads are all run to their seperate taps (they are all isolated anyway right and don't care about series or parallel really) but the individual packs are basically all disconnected - unless the CellLogs are left on (I am adding a jumper wire to remote turn on the CellLog8s (which adds one more 4PDT relay but really low current, just to interrupt the ground line from each of the 3-4 cell log 8s.) when the eBike is turned on or when the charger is connected...
This means:
a.) No chance for a short durring automated operation... a pause is built in between switching from Series to Parallel and vice versa.
b.) No parasitic loss of power from monitors left forgotten... self discharge could still be an issue, especially with older cells.
c.) No chance of KFF from forgetting to disconnect something from series or parallel

2.) Discharge wiring can be perfectly sheilded, neat and clean and without points of resistance (outside connectors) also offering the ability to collect 3P worth of 15S but provide whatever discharge guage plugs or type I may want... I use 4.5mm bullets for discharge on 8AWG HD Silver Silicone (*yea I know but it was free from the car stereo shop and it's only 6" from connector to controller connector and 3" from there to the controller PCB.) but to my surprise it was actually more flexible and had lower resistance (measured for an entire 500' roll and extrapolated) than the HK stock wire and it fits the solder side of even the 3.5mm plugs (but not the shrouds)... in either case...

3.) Charger connection will automatically disconnect the pack from discharge mode or series and connect it in parallel, discharge leads first then balance leads and finallly it will engage a relay allowing current to pass from the charge leads to the main battery... this will again prevent any whoops, even if you leave the bike powered on and plug in the charger.

What I was offering though... if people want I will be happy to craft up some .9mil thick double epoxy coated gold plated discharge plug parallel boards... I'm not big in snap off style, my PCB house doesn't charge me more to cut them down from single stock sheets and I can do placement so I could do a few versions but to avoid the need for soldering wire into the plugs then soldering that wire through ports in the PCB would be a PITA and I would prefer the connectors fit (solder side down) snugly into the PCB holes so that you press fit them into place and solder top and bottom sides for a positive electrical low resistance connection.

So what connector types and how many per PCB would people want? I know 3.5mm is important and I assume most packs are between 2 and 4P so I could do a 4P version exclusive on the 3.5 and let people have room to upgrade down the line (their packs)... I also assume I can stack these by using port 4 to link to a second parallel board (which is what I have planned already for my mega pack). I guess 4.5mm would be needed to for the 30C packs...

Gary what do you think?

If we can decide I will whip up the PCBs and post the artwork (Gerbers and PDF) this weekend... I will have a few prototypes run then depending on cost quoted and demand I could have them within 10 days - if experience tells me anything they would be like 15.00 each in a few hundred quantity... but they will be works of art and impervious to the elements... think the hardness of smartcard contacts rated for 100,000 insertions = )_

-Mike
 
nieles said:
for the charge controller, what is the range for the amp limiter? i would like to charge at 1A, 5A 10A and 15A. is this possible?

Yes, the basic Charge Controller is good for a max of about 30A. With some beefing up of traces, heavier gauge wire and a beefier current measuring shunt, it could be good for up to 100A.

-- Gary
 
dermot said:
Gary, do you have the schematic/assembly instructions ready yet?

I'd like to have a look at how the charge controller works, especially since sometimes getting exact parts in the UK can be a bit of a challenge (had to make a couple of substations on my v2 BMS). Great job on pretty much finishing this latest project - I look forward to diving in!

dermot

I will have the Charge Controller and LVC-HVC instructions done a little later today. I'm also adding to the BOM files, to add alternates for the parts that are not in stock. the Battery Medic instructions will follow.
 
mwkeefer said:
What I was offering though... if people want I will be happy to craft up some .9mil thick double epoxy coated gold plated discharge plug parallel boards... I'm not big in snap off style, my PCB house doesn't charge me more to cut them down from single stock sheets and I can do placement so I could do a few versions but to avoid the need for soldering wire into the plugs then soldering that wire through ports in the PCB would be a PITA and I would prefer the connectors fit (solder side down) snugly into the PCB holes so that you press fit them into place and solder top and bottom sides for a positive electrical low resistance connection.

So what connector types and how many per PCB would people want? I know 3.5mm is important and I assume most packs are between 2 and 4P so I could do a 4P version exclusive on the 3.5 and let people have room to upgrade down the line (their packs)... I also assume I can stack these by using port 4 to link to a second parallel board (which is what I have planned already for my mega pack). I guess 4.5mm would be needed to for the 30C packs...

Gary what do you think?

If we can decide I will whip up the PCBs and post the artwork (Gerbers and PDF) this weekend... I will have a few prototypes run then depending on cost quoted and demand I could have them within 10 days - if experience tells me anything they would be like 15.00 each in a few hundred quantity... but they will be works of art and impervious to the elements... think the hardness of smartcard contacts rated for 100,000 insertions = )_

-Mike

I think a 4p parallel board for the main pack leads would be a good idea, I've actually done this before, but it is too much of a pain to solder in the bullets. The problem I had is that I sized the holes to fit the 4mm bullets that are on the Zippy and Turnigy 5Ah packs, but the "loose" bullet connectors that HC sells have a slightly smaller diameter, so they don't fit snug into the holes. the next size smaller hole was too small. I gave up at that point, but after seeing what Kim (AussieJester...) did, where he made a wooden jig to hold the bullets, I might revisit this.

Some of the higher-C Turnigy packs are now coming with 5.5mm bullets, so if you are going to do two sizes, I'd vote for 4mm and 5.5mm.

-- Gary
 
ggoodrum said:
I think a 4p parallel board for the main pack leads would be a good idea, I've actually done this before, but it is too much of a pain to solder in the bullets. The problem I had is that I sized the holes to fit the 4mm bullets that are on the Zippy and Turnigy 5Ah packs, but the "loose" bullet connectors that HC sells have a slightly smaller diameter, so they don't fit snug into the holes. the next size smaller hole was too small. I gave up at that point, but after seeing what Kim (AussieJester...) did, where he made a wooden jig to hold the bullets, I might revisit this.

Some of the higher-C Turnigy packs are now coming with 5.5mm bullets, so if you are going to do two sizes, I'd vote for 4mm and 5.5mm.

-- Gary

Gary... I agree with almost everything you have said, except the pain to solder the bullets part!

I've done similar multiple diameter hard plugs attached to PCB in the past and there are a few alternatives to solve the issue of snugness or adaptability to various bullet / deans type without making multiple parallel boards...

Solution #1 - This would be my third runner up choice but it works and is solid if the solder joints are done properly!
Works for all size and types of connectors, round plugs/ sockets, Anderson Power poles, etc but it's a bit more time consuming than the rest!
Simply have normal VIAs bored for with 10mil (min) thickness traces running from each discharge plug (positive and negative) to the next VIA for the next discharge pin... this done on both sides with .9 double clad would provide the (remember it's flat and doesn't have as high of an inductance?, well there is somthing to be said for flat trace vs round wire - Now this is the simplest (and most time consuming portion of this solution) using aligator arms... presolder a small 1/2" section of either stranded and pre-tinned or solid copper (preferrably teflon) min 10AWG into each gold plug / socket... then simply ensure the diameter of the vias or actually I guess they would be Thrus (it's been a while since I cared to design multi layer boards for higher current handling)...

Solution #2 - This would be my second runner up choice because although it's simple(ish) it would possibly require either the use of clamp arms or for automating (or atleast making assembly efficient) and honestly I would build a jig for each type of connector to be fit... have a thru with this minimum diameter predrilled but with sufficient trace material surrounding (5-10mil) so that if needed you can drill the holes to a larger diameter with a dremel press and a proper bit to still require a bit of a press fit... The other option (and a fully viable one given the diameter of the via/thru and the width and thickness of the traces (dual plane) would be a jig to hold X connectors of proper male female order in exactly dead center of the via as it exists and then just solder away at the base to join it with the surround (insead of placing the wire within, just solder around but the jig would ensure proper placement and centering of various connector types (by jig it could be as simple as a 2x4 block / with the inverse of what needs to be placed on the PCB and prefitted (loaded) with the negative couplings (the ones we want on the PCB for parallel discharge).

Solution #3 - This is actually my first choice because it's simple, keeps distribution of volume taken by paralleling package in a left to right and mostly 2 dimensional or at minimum very short profile... also it's perhaps the easiest to peform manual soldering while ensureing maximum current ability and minimum resistance.

Simply design the far edge of the PCB with a series of Traces which seem to dead end but are via paralleled just about 3mm from the edge of the PCB. The width would be 6mm with either 6mm spacing between traces (to prevent high voltage possible arching or cross trace damage in event of a short) - now just use an alligator clip (or a jig if you can make one up, wouldn't be too hard once PCB was designed... could even be an identical PCB but mirrored with the opposite plugs mated already) and solder at the edges of the connector and the back side... this will provide a low resistance and strong connection... also it will allow for the last 2mm of sheath (the red, blue whatever they are) to be cut off and then the protective polarized connector surrounds to be simply placed over the plugs and sockets and affixed using expoxy... If you look at an HV110 or HV140 they do this way and actually you can beef them up (or atleast lower the resistance) by adding connectors to each side of the PCB for the EagleTree and using 2 sets of say 10G AWG 200C 600v Teflon wire you can half the resistance and double the peak current handling while halfing the power loss to voltage sag over the same length of run...

That's my .02 on the Parallel termination blocks... I will do somthing on these because I am damn tired of breaking out the 10G... cutting an output line, then cutting x input lines... soldering all the positives and negatives to the individual collector connections and then finally doing as tight a wirewrap as I can with solid core copper to bind the X number of 10G lines together before I solder them, cover them with high temp and v electrical tape and then 100C shrinkwrap. Its a time consuming process and requires a very fine soldering hand because if you slop outside the cup end of these damn things they really don't want to go into their connector housings, one trick I figured out is to use a lighter to heat them up (hold em with needle nose) then just push real hard and quick and the heat will help the plug slide right past the catch... took me a week to figure out - I was using a hammer and aluminum tube based chisel type thing which would apply pressure evenly across 90% of the terminator sheild head for forcing it on.

One last thing... Gary, I had a though I wanted to test out and thought I'd ask your opinion before trying it...

1.) The MKS balancers seem to do a much better (more accurate) balance job than the display would indicate - some spec somewhere lists 4% variance on display but much better on the balance side of things (I guess they are not inter dependent upon one another...
2.) I have 5 of these in total (for 2 packs) and I have a relay which kills the Ground line (isolated 3PST) for each of a maximum of 3 I use right now at a time on each pack... I have added a small delay (R/C discharge timer) which gives me about 4-5 seconds and then triggers another 5v relay (rated at .25ma max) which simply presses the balance button on the MKS (only 3 of mine have this mod) but what it allows is when I engage the charging mode... the balancers automatically power up (off the charge port input) and within 5 seconds begin their balance cycle.
3.) In addition to the 5 full working (but more than 35mv variance between them all) I have 4 units with cracked screens which are basically useless to me without the screens (well I could use them blind on packs on the bike but)... I have been thinking given the 400ma of balance current but the 66% duty cycle so between 225 and 300 max of balance current at a time however as I read in your previous posting the discharge control and load board is seperated from the main MCU/UI interface... this is how you managed to tap into the 7 lines I assume you needed to trigger your "MKS on Roids" discharge / balancer enhancer.

So now the question... do you see a potential issue with daisy chaining additional discharge / dissappation layers from my 4 broken LCD units and combining them in parallel with the existing units or would that reduce the balance current (parallel) and require some method of series connecting ?

I know you have studied these in more depth than I...

I guess I have one final question... the pcb seems to have many ports and hand offs (not just the ISP programming port) which are unused... do you see any sign (or better since it would be at 2400baud, data) of an interlink bus intended to join multiple Master units to provide a common reference voltage and high / low cell information from other MKS units... that would be the ultimate combined with your booster circuit but I would remove the onboard resistor discharge network and repackage the MKS in your booster box (or make it possible if you didn't do it?)

Gary with regards to your kits/PCBs...

Please reserve for me:

4 x 6S HVC/LVC PCBs (and parts if you have purchased in qty and are offering as kit, I saw the site already but I assume if you can assemble them you have parts on hand and could sell them as kits)
(These can be adapted for use on 15S adapting the jst-hxt 3x5S to fill the first 2x6S and the final one with 3S right? or it is covered in the manual) also can these be adjusted for the HVC optocouple for Lipo chemistry to above or below 4.16 if a user so chose to - so I could set cutout at 4.15 (component value changes and hard set is fine as this will be for testing various cutout levels on packs) or even as high as 4.20v?

3 x Charge Controller PCBs (and again parts if you have them on hand - how many PCBs do you have on hand - pm if you prefer, jsut want to see the capacity on raw materials!)

3 x HK Balance Booster PCBs (again with parts if available from you without delay at reasonable prices, but with the above... if PCB and BOM + directions but without parts is the fastest way to get my hands on and built... please just send PCBs!

Also...

I know were supposed to keep the cross threading to a minimum to avoid confusion but the next time you have a version ready for beta testing / even alpha testing, Im always down with receiving the smallest possible module (I have nothing smaller than 3S but mostly 5 and 6S) and I would be happy to test it on some of my packs which aren't in active use anymore (puffing but still doing 5000mah + at 2C (highest testing current I can pull) and have everything but a reflow station ... never needed one though, just use a super fine tip on my weller!

Great work Gary and Fechter, glad to see it coming to fruition and ordering status / ability!

-Mike
 
GGoodrum said:
dermot said:
Gary, do you have the schematic/assembly instructions ready yet?

I'd like to have a look at how the charge controller works, especially since sometimes getting exact parts in the UK can be a bit of a challenge (had to make a couple of substations on my v2 BMS). Great job on pretty much finishing this latest project - I look forward to diving in!

dermot

I will have the Charge Controller and LVC-HVC instructions done a little later today. I'm also adding to the BOM files, to add alternates for the parts that are not in stock. the Battery Medic instructions will follow.

hi
there is a mouser uk http://gb.mouser.com/Home.aspx that I will be ordering my BOM through with free fed ex on orders over £50 my order will be, I have 4 HVC/LVC boards a charge controller and a battery medic booster all in PCB format coming, when they come I will see what is needed and place the BOM orders ASAP.
if you can wait till I place my order then PM me othewise you might have enough for a order of your own.

Due to this volcanic cloud at the moment nothing will be crossing the pond from the US to the UK that will not affect my time of placing my bom with Mouser as Gary is sending my stuff to knuckles in the US he will then send it on with other parts I have ordered from the US which now could be some time. :(

Geoff
 
With v4 BMS are cells protected against overcharge during regen or is there a risk of overcharging cells if regen kicks in on a full pack? If there isn't protection, is there a recommendation for dealing with this scenario?
 
Back
Top