I think we've already discussed the contactor-based BMSs (whcih is what I would use for a high current EV), but if not, there's a few threads and posts they're discussed in around the forum.
I’m not sure what you’re asking about the 77 or 770?Ok is that 77lbs or 770lbs math . Ok that's doable oh pust packing and BMS some Bms's are 4-5lbs .oh and copper. Adding up.
Oh 770g divided by 16 oz eagles 48 lb that's a whole lot of math I hope I think I figured out rightOh that's a lot better I read the stat sheet and they said
7 g a cell times 308 ?
7 x 308 = 2.1560g. 2.156 divided by 28 = 77
Maybe I got it real wrong thanks for the correction
You can bolt it on. Crimp a good double-ring terminal (also called ring-tongue)
Yeah, was thinking of just making my ownYou can make your own; use the pictures of the two-hole versions as a guide to how they should look, more or less.
Great idea! maybe put the cut flat section in a vice to help flatten. And I could use sandpaper on the backside of a piece of glass on the mating surface to get it completely flat.Buy copper or brass tube of the right diameter and wall thickness to fit securely over your wire conductors.
Cut it so you have enough length for the amount of conductor you will crimp into the tube, plus enough for the length of the flat part that will bolt to the busbar.
Crimp the tube to the wire.
Hammer or otherwise flatten the tube for the rest of it's length past the conductor.
Using two bolts inline as I was showing is more for ensuring the cable can't pull on the ring terminal "sideways" (yaw around the bolt center) in a way that could loosen the hardware and decrease the contact pressure (increasing contact resistance), though if you have sufficient contact surface area of the hardware heads/washers to the flat area, and to the busbar, then more bolts can increase the electrical contact area and decrease contact resistance.
Are you saying that by using just a single mounting bolt would offer the same even current flow VS having multiple bolts? I get what you’re saying by using two bolts on the lug to prevent from the discharge wire, wiggling the single bolt loose.But a larger surface area single-bolt ring terminal will do the latter the same way.
Well was thinking by using a few discharge wires from the busbar would create less of a hotspot in one area. So basically would have more even current flow throughout the whole bus bar not just on one side.Not sure why you would need multiple wires per busbar, unless the busbars and/or wires are not sufficient crosssection to pass the current your system will require.
Are you saying that by using just a single mounting bolt would offer the same even current flow VS having multiple bolts? I get what you’re saying by using two bolts on the lug to prevent from the discharge wire, wiggling the single bolt loose.
If the resistance of the connection is correctly low, it won't have any hotspots.Well was thinking by using a few discharge wires from the busbar would create less of a hotspot in one area. So basically would have more even current flow throughout the whole bus bar not just on one side.
Just a thought though, you certainly know a lot more about this than me
Yeah good point about the rubber cutting into the cell holders etc… So the rubber in the middle of the fiber board might be better like your suggesting, then I could use slightly thicker rubber (2 or 3mm) since there will only be one layer in the middle.Will the rubber be proof against being cut into by the cell holders, etc? If not, you will probably be better off using two layers of hard stuff with the rubber between them to protect it.
Yes, but the fiberboard would be doubled up, and would make the stack taller. Thinner fiberboard would help that, but if you were already using the thin stuff....
Oh, also, I hadn't thought about it before, but if you did have the rubber right on the cell block, it would compress and could sit hard enough against hte cell tops to put pressure on the cell ends. I don't know what effect that has on them, but its' a thought.
Are you looking for shock absorption, or just vibration damping?
If the latter, a flexibly-dense heavy solid rubber would work better for such a thin layer.
I don't know what it's called, but I have a very small sheet here that was sent to me with my EIG cells, sized such that I think it was used on one end of one of the cell stacks. It feels almost like "rubber lead", if that makes any sense; if you can imagine pizza dough made of lead. :lol: Very heavy for it's ~2mm thickness; it might be impregnated with metal particles to cause that, but you wouldn't need those unless you're also looking to conduct heat (probably not).
What exactly do you mean?My first thought for using the rubber is to absorb the weight of the battery
Yeah good point!
Although it seems that the neoprene rubber is always marketed as shock absorbing. I guess it would be similar as actual suspension, the heavier the weight, the more stiff/density would be needed to help with dampening.
While true of a direct vertical shock thru the mass of the layer, it isn't the case for shocks that result at an angle thru the pack forward--that places more of the shock energy into the much smaller lowest block layer. Exactly how it works out depends on how everything is interconnected and what materials are used, etc.As mentioned above, the bottom cell block will be absorbing most of the weight, but the backside of the battery will be sitting on top of the motor mount so that’ll take some of the weight off the very bottom cell Block.
What exactly do you mean?
There isn't a way to absorb static weight (that would require antigravity).
Some thoughts on how these things do work (though I don't know the detailed materials science behind it all, or any of the math):
If you are trying to absorb vertical shocks, then you need something that absorbs energy, which typically is done by compressing the something and storing that energy either within the structure as deformations or as heat, then releases that energy back once the source of energy is removed (end of bump, etc), decompressing the something in the process. (almost always there is some permanent compression/deformation, and this can increase over time each time the permanent-limit of the material is exceeded.
To do this, it has to be either dense enough or thick enough to take all the energy from everything above it that can move. If you have a multilayer stack, then you would need a layer proportionally thicker than the one on the layer above it, all the way down to the bottom, or proportionally denser. (because each layer adds another set of masses above it, until the last layer has to support the entire battery mass).
To have it actually do something predictable (which is useful), you'd need to either test different materials with equivalent masses per surface area on them with a known and replicable vertical displacement, to see which materials can handle the situation you expect them to have to, or use the situational info and material specs from companies making it to calculate what you'd need, and in what thickness. That's a lot of work, either way.
But without doing one or both of those, you don't really know what, if anything, the materials will do in regards to what you *want* them to do. It could be that it'll do everything you want just by trying the first thing...or it might do nothing at all, but either way you won't actually know what it's doing (unless you are really interested in finding out by instrumenting the pack in a way that tells you what is happening, and/or failures occur because of things that should ahve been prevented, so that you then know it *didn't* work.).
So for the purpose of minimizing vertical shocks, and to save material/weight/cost/size, it would be better to connect all the layers together in a way that locks them to each other and just prevents any movement between them. Then you only need shock absorption in the bottom under pack layer, below all the cells. This is better for inter-layer interconnects, too, since that way they will see less flexing and movement, and be less likely to have any form of stress failures at the interconnect connection points, or wherever it flexes.
For vibration damping, then something with compression in the same manner as the above isn't as important as something taht just absorbs the vibration energy (usually by warming up), so a solid rubber probably works better than a foam, depending on the characteristics of the rubber, since the vibrations aren't just going to be vertically-oriented, unlike most of the shock loading.
All flexible material (including rubber) is shock absorbing in that it absorbs energy by flexure/compression/etc.
But even within neoprene there are different properties, and within other rubbers there is a wide variety of properties that may better suit your purposes.
Neoprene itself has a variety of densities, for instance, with different bubble sizes and ratios of rubber to air, and different qualities of the actual rubber. Some of it is very stretchy, and a lot of it will tear very easily if subjected to stretching, while taking thru-thickness compression very well.
While true of a direct vertical shock thru the mass of the layer, it isn't the case for shocks that result at an angle thru the pack forward--that places more of the shock energy into the much smaller lowest block layer. Exactly how it works out depends on how everything is interconnected and what materials are used, etc.
Then you're looking for vertical shock load absorption (resisting momentary increases in apparent weight from the vertical increases in acceleration on bumps/holes/etc), not vertical weight absorption (antigravityOh.. I meant my initial thought of using rubber between each ply is to help with the downward/vertical pressure while riding. I’m saying this, because this is a lot of weight of multiple modules stacked on top of each other, so the rubber between would help absorb some of the downward pressure from riding Enduro. If I were building a bike for the street, I wouldn’t worry about this so much but there’s a lot of jarring, bouncing, etc. while riding through extreme off-road Enduro trails.
If you really want to do that with this rubber-sheet part, you'd have to determine how much energy is going to need to be absorbed by the damping material to damp as much as you want it to (however much that is), and find a damping material that will do that within the space limitations you have. There might not be such a material.I mean truthfully, the rubber probably isn’t necessary, but I’m just trying to do everything overkill especially this being my very first battery build. The goal is to never have to reopen to make any modifications changes etc., so just trying to go through every little detail to make sure I get this 100% on the first attempt
While I'm no engineer of any kind, I've broken or seen broken so very many things that I have learned quite a lot about how not to break them...and I still find novel ways to do it anyway. :lol:Your input and insight is always very appreciated!