The closest one I have in my drawers is a 270Ohm 9W, but I'll switch to that one and time how fast it precharges.1kOhm is too much. Your capacitors will charge too slow.
I would take something in the range 20-50Ohm with 10-25W
I got an Ant bms thanks to your ninja build , I am getting rid of contactor ,precharge charge relay resistor etc. with bms it is way lighter , no wasted power, way simple and very clean wiringYou are using an ANT BMS: it already does precharge.
You can configure the precharge current in the BMS settings directly. There's no real need for this resistor anymore.
How do you switch the pack on and off without a contactor?I got an Ant bms thanks to your ninja build , I am getting rid of contactor ,precharge charge relay resistor etc. with bms it is way lighter , no wasted power, way simple and very clean wiring
The bms has its own low voltage on and off button , i take notes from Dui ni shuoHow do you switch the pack on and off without a contactor?
acts like SSR with precharge , i have yet to program settings still learning,The bms has its own low voltage on and off button , i take notes from Dui ni shuo
How do you switch the pack on and off without a contactor?
I thought that this switch should be pressed once to turn the BMS on and then basically be forgotten about to let the BMS do its thing. Doing it this was would simplify things a lot though. No contactor, no precharge circuit, no 12v battery, just only click then go.Remember that the BMS by itself is a contactor, its role is to cut off the battery from the rest of the circuit when various conditions are met.
There is a small button that comes with the BMS: press it for 6 seconds and it turns the BMS off, which shuts off the current output. Press it again for one second and the BMS will turn back ON. It will turn back on by gradually opening the mosfets (oversimplification, but that's the idea), which acts like a precharge system to limit the inrush current going to the controller capacitors. You can install this button anywhere you want so that it is convenient for you. Of course you can replace it with a better quality button as the one that's included with the BMS is usually just a very crappy little push button.
You can also use the bluetooth app to tell the BMS to switch on and off the discharge mosfets.
When you switch off the BMS with either one of these methods, as a safety measure, I suggest you leave your bikes main lights ON.
This way, if for any reason the BMS switches ON again (maybe you touched the BMS button by inadvertance, shorted the button wires while working on the harness, or for any other reason), you will immediately see that the power is back. This never happened to me but better safe than sorry.
That's how I've done it for the past 8 years.
Please note that you still need to install a fuse just in case something is very wrong with the BMS. The main fuse should ideally be installed between the battery pack and the BMS, so that if anything goes completely wrong somewhere in the circuit the fuse will blow and protect the battery from melting.
Yeah it is much easier this way.I thought that this switch should be pressed once to turn the BMS on and then basically be forgotten about to let the BMS do its thing. Doing it this was would simplify things a lot though. No contactor, no precharge circuit, no 12v battery, just only click then go.
maybe parallel all bms sense wires ,for 1 bms,I will have two ANT BMS:s though. The old one and a new for the "other battery column" since I am building two 26s1p batteries (37Ah, 9V each). The only reasons if you are wondering is because I don't know how I should have gone about making the parallell connection and the load will be spread over two BMS:s.
Working on the battery mount now. think it will be easier to make progress if I mount the battery to the frame and figure out where to put the controller.
Below is 50kg of expensive goodness.
View attachment 357330
Wouldn't those sense-wires burn immediately when I twist the throttle for any meaningful discharge?maybe parallel all bms sense wires ,for 1 bms,
Current doesn't flow through the sense wires during discharge. A well-balanced pack should have all the cells with equal voltage. The sense wires are there for the BMS to determine (sense) voltages on all the parallel pack, and if it's a balancing BMS, to deliver small amounts of balancing current. Like 200-1000ma at most.Wouldn't those sense-wires burn immediately when I twist the throttle for any meaningful discharge?
Yeah. I will go the dual BMS route. Do I set haft the precharge current in the respective BMS or ju let one BMS do the precharge?Having two BMS in this case is more expenseive, but it is the proper way to go.
You can use one BMS only if the cells are physically paralleled with each other using current load capable busbars, otherwise it's just asking for trouble because if some cells arent perfectly in balance you'll have high current circulating in the tiny voltage sensing wires and that might create undesirable effects like messing up the readings or damaging the wire.
Just set the normal amount, as you will switch on one BMS after the other anyway.Yeah. I will go the dual BMS route. Do I set haft the precharge current in the respective BMS or ju let one BMS do the precharge?
Yes, there should be no problem with this as far as I know.If I set them up identically I should be able to charge both batteries with one charger?
Realised this just as I started to think about the "new" circuit. Thanks.... as you will switch on one BMS after the other anyway. ...
Yes, I have a wire coming directly from the battery positive to the key switch.Do you run the full battery voltage through a keyswitch for turning the controller on and off?