Hey all, I've been lurking for a while but I'm running into a wall so I figured it's time to join in. 
I'm fairly new to the EV scene, but I've got a lot of ideas and I'm going to be starting work on a few of them over the next couple months. My current mid-range goal is an electric motorcycle, but I'm going to be starting with an e-bike and a couple little electric scooters I picked up cheap to figure out what I'm doing before I get into the serious money that the motorcycle is going to require...especially since I plan to make my own BLDC motors for all of them.
So, anyways, point of all that for this thread is that I'm trying to decide what batteries I should start with. I want to be able to pull a lot of low-end torque out of the motor(s) I'll make, so I want a high C discharge rating on the batteries. I was pretty well set on using A123 18650 cells, but yesterday and today I found some things that are confusing the matter for me. Before that though, the reason why I was set on 18650's instead of 26650's (at least for the first stage of projects) is because in the looking I've done on eBay, if I buy in bulk I can get the 18650's for as little as $2.20 each, whereas the 26650's seem to bottom out at around $8.20 each. Granted, I would have to run two 18650's in parallel to match a single 26650, but the cost difference is just too high when space isn't as pressing an issue.
So, like I said, I was pretty much set on the 18650's, but yesterday I ran across this thread and the Turnigy nano-tech 45C/90C cells. Then, today I ran across this thread where gblast123 mentioned the A123 32157 cells. This was the first I had heard of the 32157's, so I did a bit of research. Despite A123 apparently starting to make them way back in 2007, the only place I could find that I could actually conceivably buy them was a company called A8 Power Company. A8 doesn't list a price, but if gblast's estimate of $25 is correct, they could be quite appealing, falling square between the 18650's and Turnigys in $/Wh, and weighing in at less than either.
So, my questions to whoever might know are these:
Are there any other known sources for 32157 cells (preferably somewhere I can buy less than 200 at a time) or any other 32-series A123 cells? If so, how much are they? If not, does anyone have any experience with A8 Power Systems?
Does anyone know the charge/discharge specs for 32157 cells? Or, really, any proven specs?
Like I said, that thread was the first I'd heard of these, and the only stuff I can find online is A8 Power Systems and a bunch of news and forum posts from 2007, speculating about what they might be like. I'm assuming they're at least as good as the 18650's and 26650's, but A8 doesn't list those specs on their site, and of course A123 is no help...heck, as far as their website is concerned, they might as well not even make the things... Unless someone recommends another source, I'm going to go ahead and contact A8 to at least get prices and more specs...since from what I've seen, contacting A123 directly even just for specs would be pointless unless I want to buy a few million of them. -_^ ..I understand why, but that doesn't make it any less annoying.
Lastly, does anyone have any thoughts at this stage about what batteries might be better to use? The Turnigy Nano-tech's are very appealing (225A peak continuous out of each cell?!
), but I haven't seen anything yet verifying their charge rate (HK says 'up to 15C', but some other forums I've looked at say anywhere from 8C down to as low as 3C max -_^ ), how long they can sustain that 90C discharge rate, or their long-term durability.
Here's my current estimates. For the first stage I'm thinking a target of a 36V 10Ah pack.
Turnigy Nano-tech 5.0Ah 5S
2S-2P
37V 10Ah
370Wh
450A peak continuous
900A peak burst (?s)
possibly up to 15C charge?
4 at 715g $78.99 each
2,860g/6.3lb
$315.96
$0.85/Wh
A123 18650
11S-10P
36.3V 11Ah
399.3Wh
330A peak continuous
660A peak burst (10s)
110 at 39g $2.20 each
4,290g/9.5lb
$242.00
$0.60/Wh
A123 26650
11S-5P
36.3V 11.5Ah
417.45Wh
350A peak continuous
600A peak burst (10s)
55 at 70g $8.20 each
3,850g/8.5lb
$451
$1.08/Wh
A123 32157
11S-1P
36.3V 8-10Ah
290.4-363Wh
peak continuous?
peak burst?
11 at 252g $25 (guestimate) each
2,772g/6.1lb
$275
$0.95-$0.76/Wh
I'm fairly new to the EV scene, but I've got a lot of ideas and I'm going to be starting work on a few of them over the next couple months. My current mid-range goal is an electric motorcycle, but I'm going to be starting with an e-bike and a couple little electric scooters I picked up cheap to figure out what I'm doing before I get into the serious money that the motorcycle is going to require...especially since I plan to make my own BLDC motors for all of them.
So, anyways, point of all that for this thread is that I'm trying to decide what batteries I should start with. I want to be able to pull a lot of low-end torque out of the motor(s) I'll make, so I want a high C discharge rating on the batteries. I was pretty well set on using A123 18650 cells, but yesterday and today I found some things that are confusing the matter for me. Before that though, the reason why I was set on 18650's instead of 26650's (at least for the first stage of projects) is because in the looking I've done on eBay, if I buy in bulk I can get the 18650's for as little as $2.20 each, whereas the 26650's seem to bottom out at around $8.20 each. Granted, I would have to run two 18650's in parallel to match a single 26650, but the cost difference is just too high when space isn't as pressing an issue.
So, like I said, I was pretty much set on the 18650's, but yesterday I ran across this thread and the Turnigy nano-tech 45C/90C cells. Then, today I ran across this thread where gblast123 mentioned the A123 32157 cells. This was the first I had heard of the 32157's, so I did a bit of research. Despite A123 apparently starting to make them way back in 2007, the only place I could find that I could actually conceivably buy them was a company called A8 Power Company. A8 doesn't list a price, but if gblast's estimate of $25 is correct, they could be quite appealing, falling square between the 18650's and Turnigys in $/Wh, and weighing in at less than either.
So, my questions to whoever might know are these:
Are there any other known sources for 32157 cells (preferably somewhere I can buy less than 200 at a time) or any other 32-series A123 cells? If so, how much are they? If not, does anyone have any experience with A8 Power Systems?
Does anyone know the charge/discharge specs for 32157 cells? Or, really, any proven specs?
Like I said, that thread was the first I'd heard of these, and the only stuff I can find online is A8 Power Systems and a bunch of news and forum posts from 2007, speculating about what they might be like. I'm assuming they're at least as good as the 18650's and 26650's, but A8 doesn't list those specs on their site, and of course A123 is no help...heck, as far as their website is concerned, they might as well not even make the things... Unless someone recommends another source, I'm going to go ahead and contact A8 to at least get prices and more specs...since from what I've seen, contacting A123 directly even just for specs would be pointless unless I want to buy a few million of them. -_^ ..I understand why, but that doesn't make it any less annoying.
Lastly, does anyone have any thoughts at this stage about what batteries might be better to use? The Turnigy Nano-tech's are very appealing (225A peak continuous out of each cell?!

Here's my current estimates. For the first stage I'm thinking a target of a 36V 10Ah pack.
Turnigy Nano-tech 5.0Ah 5S
2S-2P
37V 10Ah
370Wh
450A peak continuous
900A peak burst (?s)
possibly up to 15C charge?
4 at 715g $78.99 each
2,860g/6.3lb
$315.96
$0.85/Wh
A123 18650
11S-10P
36.3V 11Ah
399.3Wh
330A peak continuous
660A peak burst (10s)
110 at 39g $2.20 each
4,290g/9.5lb
$242.00
$0.60/Wh
A123 26650
11S-5P
36.3V 11.5Ah
417.45Wh
350A peak continuous
600A peak burst (10s)
55 at 70g $8.20 each
3,850g/8.5lb
$451
$1.08/Wh
A123 32157
11S-1P
36.3V 8-10Ah
290.4-363Wh
peak continuous?
peak burst?
11 at 252g $25 (guestimate) each
2,772g/6.1lb
$275
$0.95-$0.76/Wh