amberwolf said:
Usually, with most, it'd be "safe". But failures of various kinds can happen even "off". There's a post some time back by John in CR describing a hardcase RC LiPo pack that was new, unused, sitting on a desk, that just caught fire for no visible reason.
It's unlikely...but possible.
Exactly. MOST of the instances of failure happen during use (charge/discharge) or after immediate mechanical or environmental exposures, but there have also been many cases where lithium batteries appear to have caught fire for absolutely no reason, when sitting idle not being charged, discharged, or subject to any external forces. I've been party to 2 instances of this happening firsthand, once in someone's bedroom room here in Vancouver (he was lucky to be home and just waking up when the pack started to confalgrate and able to drag it outside before it turned into a fireball), and in another case one of our suppliers had a battery inside a pallet in their warehouse just go into spontaneous combustion. Both of these situations were with ebike grade ~10Ah LiPo cells.
We also had one of our own customers with a brand new 18650 based pack with samsung 22P cells, sitting in the cab of his truck neither charging nor discharging, which spontanously overnight went into a meltdown and completely filled the insides of his vehicle with smoke and soot, although there was no evidence of flames and fire. In that case as far as we could tell it appeared to have an electrical bms/wiring origin rather than a cell origin, but puts you on edge just the same.
So yes, sitting there, not charging, not discharging, not visibly doing anything, lithium packs can and have gone catastrophic, and if you're in this industry long enough it will come alarming close and personal, not just anecdotal. That's why I get a bit annoyed to see so many people on ES immediately jump to the safety defense of lithium (especially lipo) batteries and claim issues are always the result of user error. Just because you yourself haven't so far had any problems with your giant collection of hobby packs and carefully balance and baby them, doesn't mean that you'll always be so lucky.
My own feeling on the relative safety with 18650 packs is that's it's probably better than most consumer plug-in appliances at this stage. I've had CF lightbulbs from home depot melt down and drip molten glass on the floor, toasters that don't pop up and cook crumbs into smoke etc. But I still often leave the lights on when I'm not around the house, and I'll similarly leave an 18650 pack charging on the floor when I'm not around, as IMO are at similar risks of causing an incident. Others are sure to turn off everything plugged in the wall before they leave the house, and would never let a battery charge unattended, and I wouldn't fault them at all for having an abundance of caution either.
999zip999 said:
What I don't understand is why a successful ebike company pendago have battery fires and recall and then you don't hear that many battery fires of victpower or cammy batteries. Most people fill ashamed I don't talk about their battery fires.
Do you think Cammy or Victpower would issue a massive public recall if one of their customers experienced a battery incident? Even if 10 or 50 customers had incidents? I don't think anyone would hear about it. There is such a night and day difference in responsibility and liability between what we expect from a reputable western based company vs what we tolerate from a china exporter.