orangutan said:
I have one cell charger. After a ride I charged all the batteries with 58.4V charger and then charged four cells with lower voltage (about 3.38V) with single cell charger up to 3.60V, but after some time their voltage dropped to about 3.40V. What is interesting, one of these four cells consumed more than 3Ah, while other three about 0.100-0.150Ah.
That explains a lot, as I figured your cells were not even close to being balanced so when you bulk charged the voltage for the cells with more initial charge went way up.
orangutan said:
After that I decided to try to charge with 58.4V charger. It worked about 1 minute with fan consuming about 70W (when batteries are discharged it consumes about 320W), then green LED switched on, fan stopped and electricity consuption dropped to about 17W becoming less.
I would suggest if posible you increase the charger voltage to 59-59.5V. Now that you got the cells state of charge closer with the single-cell charger there shouldn't be the tendency for one cell to go way up. A higher charging voltage of 3.70V/cell (59.2V) will help get the low cells up bit faster where the BMS can then bleed them all down to the same point. The balance point on my BMS is 3.60V, yours might be different. I would not go over 60V as that can cause cells to trip the high cell level circuit on the BMS too often.
orangutan said:
I decided to measure temperature on BMS with IR thermometer. On resistors it became up to 60C. On FETs only about 21C (19C in room). The highest voltage cell this time became 3.85V, after an hour dropped to 3.72V. Lowest cells became about 3.45V, after an hour - about 3.40V. Difference in voltage became smaller, but still unbalanced.
It's normal for the shunt resistors to get very warm when they are bleeding the voltage off the high cells to get them down to the balnce point voltage. Once they have accomplished this they will feel cold. I use this as a quick "touch" indicator that the balancing is completed.
Once the BMS has completed bleeding down the high cells you should check the individual cell voltages. You should find many at the identical voltage, these would be the cells which went over the balance point and were bled down. The cells which still read low never got above the balance point so the pack is not yet fully balanced.
Most chargers turn green when the current reaches a preset value, often 0.2-0.4A, however most will not shut off and will continue to supply current until the pack voltage reaches the charging voltage and the current approaches zero. Therefore
leave the charger on the pack for a good hour after the LED turns green. This will help bring the low cells up, albeit slowly. After an hour remove the charger, wait 15-30 minutes and check the individual cell voltages, they should be closer together.
-R