I assembled the overvolting packs from cells. The pack in the photo is made of four 8Ah NiMH cells recovered from a used Bionx 24V NiMH battery. The A123 pack cells came from a DeWalt 36V pack I bought on Ebay. A123 are rated at 2.3Ah per cell, I typically get 2.15Ah with a 3.0V low voltage cutoff, so the pack is about 4.3Ah. I use a Watt's Up to keep from running the A123 below recommended voltage. Note that the overvolt pack is only half the 8Ah of the BionX battery, so I would need to make a 4s4p A123 pack in order to get the full use of both batteries together.
Sacman- At first, early last year, I added 1.2V NiMH cells a few at a time to see how high I could go. I was surprised at how much difference just three cells made in the top speed I could achieve. Alright, it wasn't defying the laws of physics, but it put a smile on my face. My extended time cruising speed on a flat road with no wind rose from 18 to 23 mph with the 4s2p A123 pack. It climbs hills more aggressively as well. I have been planning to try this someday on a 350 or 500 watt BionX. You could end up with the world's baddest BionX with a 48V PL500HS.
You only need to open the battery case and snip one of the heavy gauge wires coming off the internal battery pack. Solder some Dean's wet noodle wire onto each end of the wire you cut and run them back out of the bolt hole the way I did. I did have to cut off a small plastic piece which normally forms a cylinder around the bolt to get enough room tho thread the wires out as shown in the photo. Pretty minor stuff for a major improvement. Use a voltmeter to make sure you have the polarity correct, and plug in the overvolt pack when you're ready for more power.
While experimenting last year, I found that a 5s2p 17.5V A123 pack would cause the display console to show strange things and power would cut in and out, I guess 45.5V was a little too much for the 24V system. I also found that engaging regenerative braking while using any overvolt pack could cause the BionX to stop assisting, but cycling the power brought everything back to normal. As mentioned by others, regen makes a nice brake, but isn't much use for extending range, so I just keep it turned off.
Perhaps someone here knows how I could achieve a constant flow of 42V to my BionX system, even while my pack voltage drops off during discharge. I notice the difference when the combo pack drops down 3V or so after the first mile. It is steady after that, but I would really like to keep it at the performance I get at 42V. Raising the pack voltage overall wont work because it causes the BionX to act strangely as mentioned above. Is the only solution to build a 48V A123 pack and buy a DC to DC voltage converter that would output 42V from a 42-48V input? Anyone know if such a thing is available and how much it would cost? Could the converter keep the output at 42V even while the input side dropped down from 48V at full to around 42V when empty?
Belated happy birthday wishes to DoctorBass!