John in CR
100 TW
Over the past 12 years I've used a voltmeter as the only gauge on quite of few ebikes, and I've always treated an at rest voltage of 3.7V/cell as the point where you need to already be on your way back home, ie roughly 50% DOD. The vast majority of my packs have never been run to 100% DOD or even 90% for that matter, so I don't really even truly know the pack's capacity other than maybe when new if I ran a cell through a full cycle or two with my iCharger. That means that even my CA can't give me a fuel gauge on an aged pack.
I've seen plenty of discharge graphs, but those show voltage under continuous load, but riding is anything but continous on all but the longest trips. What I'd like to see is some discharge graphs with a pause to show at rest voltage at the 50% DOD point, to see if it's really a reliable point and what it actually is for different chemistry batteries. I'm not talking about LiFePo4 where I know voltage (whether at rest or under load) is all but useless unless you get down to 3.00V and almost empty.
I do understand that it's not reliable at all once the cells get quite low, since voltage bounces back so much, but knowing with some certainty the at rest voltage at the 50% DOD point, would be quite useful to everyone, as would whether it changes with age. It's especially useful on my larger capacity bikes, where they only get partially charged 2 or 3 times a week, so they spend the majority of their time much closer to a good storage voltage than full in the interest of extended life.
I've seen plenty of discharge graphs, but those show voltage under continuous load, but riding is anything but continous on all but the longest trips. What I'd like to see is some discharge graphs with a pause to show at rest voltage at the 50% DOD point, to see if it's really a reliable point and what it actually is for different chemistry batteries. I'm not talking about LiFePo4 where I know voltage (whether at rest or under load) is all but useless unless you get down to 3.00V and almost empty.
I do understand that it's not reliable at all once the cells get quite low, since voltage bounces back so much, but knowing with some certainty the at rest voltage at the 50% DOD point, would be quite useful to everyone, as would whether it changes with age. It's especially useful on my larger capacity bikes, where they only get partially charged 2 or 3 times a week, so they spend the majority of their time much closer to a good storage voltage than full in the interest of extended life.