Hyperion LBA10 Net Balancer
The LBA10 Net Balancer is used to get the maximum performance from your Li-Po or A123 battery packs in a voltage range of 2S-6S in one of three ways:

"Stand-Alone" discharge (without a charger or discharger attached)

Loaded Discharge (with a load device for discharge load)

Balance-While-Charging (using a LiPo or A123 compatible charger)
http://holmeshobbies.com/product.php?productid=88&cat=7&page=1
$39.95
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First I wonder what is meant by "Stand Alone" verses "Loaded Discharge" and what is different. Does "Stand Alone" mean that the balancer works when the batteries sit doing nothing and then "Loaded Discharge" means that it works only while riding the bike? Probably.
I don't care about charge balancing for my SLA's, so the fact that this is designed for Lipos during charging is unimportant to me. All I would want is a way to protect my SLA's with a runtime balancer.
The price is right... $40... it actually might make economic sense to do this to protect the SLA's from the cronic problem of "runt" cells... :wink: (it would extend the life of the "runt" a great deal I suspect)
SLA's in series (combined with other chemistries or not) will gradually create imbalances and "runts" will die off early. This could be the cure. Anyone know much about these? Has anyone ever tried to use them just for their runtime capabilities and not their charging capabilities?
The battery voltage range is claimed to be: 26.0V (2S-6S LiPo or A123) so the idea of connecting 48 volts worth of SLA would probably require addition costs and then the whole thing goes downhill. (I think I asked about this a little while ago elsewhere and I had concluded it wouldn't work with just one)
On this thread:
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=4332&start=30
...someone had suggested something costing $235.

So starting at $40 is at least making some progress. :lol:
Maybe this product could be combined with something like a resistor on each cell at the point that the balancer connects so that it would be able to handle the higher voltage?
Okay... I'm suggesting a "hack"... but a $40 solution for SLA's is worth thinking about.
