dnmun
1 PW
going back to your original argument that the over discharge would happen during an event when the battery is not supervised, i think that was a very valid argument, but still think the damage could be minimal if the discharge current is in the milliamp range. but i am not an expert so i cannot be certain of that especially if the drawdown is significant.
however i do think that 300mV of sag or internal resistance beyond your 3V cutoff selection would not imply that the cell was overdischarged or reversed at that point in time, and that an immediate cessation of current draw would save the cell from damage.
again, this is all my opinion, not meant to diss you or your concerns. it would be neat if there was more knowledge from rcgroups.com about lipo over discharge here on ES as well. maybe some people who spend a lot of time there like gary or holmes or anyone else could drag in a good link to provide people an opportunity to think it through themselves.
i agree it is best to be safe than sorry however, especially where the cells are so expensive and can be totally ruined by a single over discharge event. everyone will have an opinion, and maybe if those who have ruined cells from over discharge could recount how it happened, or who actually have a good grasp of the dynamics in lipo over discharge could explain more, it would be less subject to anxiety and more based on real experiences from those who have already lost cells this way.
but i think you are right to be very careful when getting down there, and maybe the CA could give you that 3V warning, and let you leave the 2.7V part in the BMS.
really, not intended to diss method's argument, just to discuss. he actually appears to be the one pushing the power envelope for this BMS to the max and i think will be the touchstone everybody will have to follow whether with lipo or lifepo4. 24 cells is the new 48V because of this board development, imo.
however i do think that 300mV of sag or internal resistance beyond your 3V cutoff selection would not imply that the cell was overdischarged or reversed at that point in time, and that an immediate cessation of current draw would save the cell from damage.
again, this is all my opinion, not meant to diss you or your concerns. it would be neat if there was more knowledge from rcgroups.com about lipo over discharge here on ES as well. maybe some people who spend a lot of time there like gary or holmes or anyone else could drag in a good link to provide people an opportunity to think it through themselves.
i agree it is best to be safe than sorry however, especially where the cells are so expensive and can be totally ruined by a single over discharge event. everyone will have an opinion, and maybe if those who have ruined cells from over discharge could recount how it happened, or who actually have a good grasp of the dynamics in lipo over discharge could explain more, it would be less subject to anxiety and more based on real experiences from those who have already lost cells this way.
but i think you are right to be very careful when getting down there, and maybe the CA could give you that 3V warning, and let you leave the 2.7V part in the BMS.
really, not intended to diss method's argument, just to discuss. he actually appears to be the one pushing the power envelope for this BMS to the max and i think will be the touchstone everybody will have to follow whether with lipo or lifepo4. 24 cells is the new 48V because of this board development, imo.