bigmoose said:....While we are on the subject of cell level connectors, I have a question for you geniuses. I am dabbling with an inductive balancing circuit that can either individually charge or discharge individual cells at 10 A average, 17 A peak while the stack is being bulk charged at whatever rate the bulk charger can supply. I am having trouble finding a multipin connector that I feel comfortable with to bring each cell's signals off the board.
John in CR said:But Bigmoose is working on some new balancing deal that does big current during high power bulk charging. My question is why just during charging? An ideal balancer would balance all the time. Then the pack isn't limited to it's weakest parallel block, and bulk charger and LVC is all we need.
Excellent! I'm definitely looking forward to hearing more about this!bigmoose said:While we are on the subject of cell level connectors, I have a question for you geniuses. I am dabbling with an inductive balancing circuit that can either individually charge or discharge individual cells at 10 A average, 17 A peak while the stack is being bulk charged at whatever rate the bulk charger can supply. I am having trouble finding a multipin connector that I feel comfortable with to bring each cell's signals off the board.
CamLight said:Another failure mechanism to deal with when considering pinouts....
I think we also have to consider potential long-term problems. As connectors are used, dirt and other contaminants often build up inside. Keeping the voltage between any two adjacent pins as low as possible helps prevent a short in case of water or conductive dust (either slightly or very conductive) entering or building up near/on the pins. Or any other unforeseen problem.
bigmoose said:It too bad we don't have 2 more pins. Ideally I would want 2 wires to top of stack and 2 to the bottom of stack.
While we are on the subject of cell level connectors, I have a question for you geniuses. I am dabbling with an inductive balancing circuit that can either individually charge or discharge individual cells at 10 A average, 17 A peak while the stack is being bulk charged at whatever rate the bulk charger can supply. I am having trouble finding a multipin connector that I feel comfortable with to bring each cell's signals off the board.
My understanding about those greases is that they're only on the parts of the connector pins not actually touching the mating contact. That is, the grease is rubbed off where the two contacts, plug and receptacle, rub against each other when mating. I'm not sure that using a grease would help for us except for water intrusion? Grease is also a great dust magnet. Somebody with more knowledge about these greases and their use will hopefully chime in.Doctorbass said:CamLight said:Another failure mechanism to deal with when considering pinouts....
I think we also have to consider potential long-term problems. As connectors are used, dirt and other contaminants often build up inside. Keeping the voltage between any two adjacent pins as low as possible helps prevent a short in case of water or conductive dust (either slightly or very conductive) entering or building up near/on the pins. Or any other unforeseen problem.
About the porential failure would the silicon grease wouldreduce the risk ?.. i mean it is already used in many comercial EV for the low current connections ?.. I kow that the commercial connector also have sme sophisticated rubber seal but for a 37 pind iy might be $$$
At wich level should we consider the potential failure?.. i mean..all low current the connector on the controller are a as sensitive as all other but it still work for our kind of needs ?
Doc
bigmoose said:......
While we are on the subject of cell level connectors, I have a question for you geniuses. I am dabbling with an inductive balancing circuit that can either individually charge or discharge individual cells at 10 A average, 17 A peak while the stack is being bulk charged at whatever rate the bulk charger can supply. I am having trouble finding a multipin connector that I feel comfortable with to bring each cell's signals off the board.
All sorts of ways you can still short things out...jonescg said:I still can't see how you would short something no matter how the boards were laid out.
OK, at 10A-17A we're limited. I was going to recommend the circular MIL connectors, but you're right, they are expensive. The plastic shell versions are less so though. The Han-E's that John recommended are also fabulous.bigmoose said:John, I would be interested in what you might have as to a connector recommendation irregardless of price. It might open up my thinking.