CGameProgrammer
10 kW
It wasn't GM; Chevron bought the patent for using NiMH in pure-electric cars, specifically so they can prevent anyone from doing so.
jdh2550 said:Hi,
I ride an XM-2000 EV Motor Scooter.
It comes with 38Ah / 60V (5 x 12V 38Ah (20hr rate)). So, by my reckoning I'd need 20s5p (possibly 19s5p) or 100 cells. This would give me 11.5Ah. Is the 2.3Ah per cell a 20hr rate or a 2hr rate? I'm hoping it's a 2hr rate! I'm hoping that 11.5Ah of lithium will give me a reliable 12 mile range (might be close!)
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NiMH does not last long at all if you deep-discharge it. That's why hybrids always keep state of charge between 40% and 60%; they never stray much from half-full. That is what allows the packs to last for at least 200,000 miles. An EV cannot afford the luxury of only using 20% of its pack, so it would not last nearly as long with one.usatracy said:The NiMH battery is recyclable, lasts longer than the life of the vehicle, is recyclable, has adequate power, is cheaper than Lithium, is safe, non-toxic and is capable of deep cycling on a daily basis.
To echo that, even the best battery technology isn't invincible. I've been using NiMH on my e-bike for years, but I don't run them to dead (well maybe only 6 times in all these years) and I try to keep them charged and topped off before each ride using a smart charger. So while I probably do push them a lot harder than what the EV cars did, I also take good care of them to help extend the life.CGameProgrammer said:NiMH does not last long at all if you deep-discharge it. That's why hybrids always keep state of charge between 40% and 60%; they never stray much from half-full. That is what allows the packs to last for at least 200,000 miles. An EV cannot afford the luxury of only using 20% of its pack, so it would not last nearly as long with one.usatracy said:The NiMH battery is recyclable, lasts longer than the life of the vehicle, is recyclable, has adequate power, is cheaper than Lithium, is safe, non-toxic and is capable of deep cycling on a daily basis.
knightmb said:If I wanted some more power and range, move up to NiMH, then finally if you want a sports car and willing to pay the high price tag, enter the Lithium cells.
One day, Lithium cells might be as dirt cheap as alkaline , but until then we have to make due with what we have. NiMH has taken a hit in price increase pushing us more towards Lithium, figuring if you are going to spend more, why not get something better for slightly more?
Most likely the BBcode is choking on the apostrophe. Folks will just have to copy and paste the link.jdh2550 said:the first entry is the Wikipedia entry <--- anyone know why that url isn't working?
I haven't read all your post yet - but this statement is dead wrong. I suppose you're gonna make me work for the right to say that, eh?only lead based batteries have peukerts effect
jdh2550 said:mcharles13 - you say you're an A123 vendor - do you have access to a technical resource there? Ask them what the Peukert constant is for the cells you use.
doctorbass - what max amperage are you drawing? My point is that it might not be a big effect in your scenario but it might be a big effect in my 21.7C scenario.
jdh said:BTW, my assumption is that one has to look at the individual cell characteristic and not the combined battery pack characteristic. Is that a correct assumption?
OneEye said:When you add enough parallel strings to last more than 10 minutes you be pulling 1/4 of that from each cell, so only ~5.4C.