melodious
100 kW
Where do you get the honeycomb patterned aluminum from? And what is it used for in the real world 

fechter said:j3tch1u said:in the end i will do a overcharge destruction test of one cell to evaluate the PCM's effectiveness against thermal runaway.
Be sure to have video![]()
Interesting idea. The outer housing will need to be sealed to prevent the wax from dripping out. Do you know what the melting temp of the wax is? It would be nice if there was a non-flammable PCM.
melodious said:Where do you get the honeycomb patterned aluminum from? And what is it used for in the real world![]()
fechter said:The wax may be a good solution to battery heating issues. Especially with Lipo pouches, they need to be protected against vibration and impact, but any kind of foam will insulate the cells and trap in the heat. Paraffin is flammable though. A sealed container that keeps oxygen out would keep it from burning (mabye). I'm thinking of those puffed Lipos that spontaneously explode. Paraffin will also expand quite a bit with temperature, so you need to accomodate that.
With your transparent battery covers, you could tell if one cell gets hotter than the rest and only melts the wax around that one.
OK, a little research shows a product that has about the right melting point but is non-flammable:
http://www.halocarbon.com/oils/halocarbon_40-600-1500_data_sheet.php
I bet it's not cheap though...
j3tch1u said:btw, would you know how to rate polyswitch ptc fuses for the parallel and series connections (i am doing 7P14S). i am guessing the parallel connections each need a holding current ~ cell current (10a) and trip current higher than that (mainly to protect the parallel string if a cell shorts). am i correct to assume only 1 series fuse is needed @ pack voltage/peak current?
j3tch1u said:thank you john. i find building an ebike more of a challenge than a software only project. it encompasses a lot of different engineering disciplines--mechanical, electrical, software, physics and some chemical. coming from an industrial engineering background, everything is about automation. forces you to see every piece in production terms--low-cost, hi-quality, reproducibility. the challenge is to minimize the materials and actions (processes) from stock to finished product. take for instance the lowly hex cap screw--i will try to use the same screw in many different places just so it can be sourced in higher quantity, use the same tooling, take up less organization space, minimize human error and require less brain cycles to use. i apologize for digressing into a lecture on operations research![]()
j3tch1u said:after riding a zero-s (thanks again luke for that memorable night ride) i decided dogati NEEDS to go sensored. so..i picked up one of these capacitive commutation encoders: http://www.cui.com/product/components/encoders/incremental-encoders/modular/amt303-v for a quick drop in solution. here are the steps i took to make it work (btw, these things are pretty tiny):
1. chucked the 3220 rotor onto my hobby lathe
2. drilled and tapped an M4 thread in the shaft (rear)
3. used a countersunk M4 screw to attach the encoder (the countersink helps secure the plastic encoder bushing firmly to the shaft axially and radially)
4. used some hot glue to temporarily secure the encoder housing.
5. connected the encoder to the programming board and set: direction (CCW), output (QAQB), resolution (1024), # poles (8) and left the commutation offset at 0.
this board has a nifty auto-zero function that gets stored into eeprom so you don't need to fiddle around with the alignment. however this only works if you know the correct commutation offset (for wye, offset is 0). i wasn't sure what the offset should be for my delta winded 3220 so i still had to adjust the encoder. running sensorless it draws 1.5A at WOT so i turned the encoder until it matched that. hooked it up to my kelly kbs controller and..the start-up is as smooth as margerine, niiiice![]()
one thing to be aware of, you need to short GND_C with GND (pins 14 and 4) when hooking up to your motor to put it into normal operating mode (vs spi comm mode). it's written in really small print on the manual and easy to miss (this had me puzzled for a few hours).
so there you have it, a sensored 3220 for $35 bucks from digikey (http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/AMT303-V/102-2051-ND/2278847?cur=USD) and about 40 mins to set it up.
View attachment 1
chucked back up onto the lathe to check commutation signals against BEMF on the scope. lookin good [thumbs up]
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briangv99 said:Hey Ben, how are you finding the performance of the Astro/Encoder/Kelly KBS. It sounds like the ideal setup for buttery smooth throttle control. Any issues? noticed you were enquiring recently on Burtie's optical encoder thread about sourcing some of his optical encoders, so interested if you had any difficulties with the encoder.
Byte said:Beautiful. Amazing. How long did it took you to make those CAD files? This whole build amazes me! Astonishing things you're building!![]()
kudos said:Drool. So are you actually going to be making these for sale??
Kudos