RageNR
100 W
- Joined
- May 23, 2016
- Messages
- 216
Let me preface this theory with the notion that I DO NOT state these figures as FACTS. This was something that struck my curiosity, and made me ponder on the actual outcome.
Please weigh in if you have theories of your own, or facts to disprove the stated theory. All discussion is welcome.
We were discussing the almost negligible gains of increasing voltage from 64.8v nominal (18s @ 3.6v/cell) to 72v (20s @ 3.6v/cell), which should result in 288w diff if pulling 40amps (2592w vs. 2880w).
The discussion didn't seem to go anywhere, but I am still very curious what the experienced e-bike tinkerers have to say on the matter.
Is it as simple as the voltage x amps = wattage @ any given voltage? Or are other factors at play, like voltage sag?
I apologize if this has been covered in depth before. I did not see anything in direct reference to this idea. Felt it was worthy of its own topic so it can be discussed without being lost amidst the posts in another thread.
I will self-quote a post I made in the "New Cyclone 3000 w mid-drive kit" thread: https://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=69867&start=1150
Please weigh in if you have theories of your own, or facts to disprove the stated theory. All discussion is welcome.
We were discussing the almost negligible gains of increasing voltage from 64.8v nominal (18s @ 3.6v/cell) to 72v (20s @ 3.6v/cell), which should result in 288w diff if pulling 40amps (2592w vs. 2880w).
The discussion didn't seem to go anywhere, but I am still very curious what the experienced e-bike tinkerers have to say on the matter.
Is it as simple as the voltage x amps = wattage @ any given voltage? Or are other factors at play, like voltage sag?
I apologize if this has been covered in depth before. I did not see anything in direct reference to this idea. Felt it was worthy of its own topic so it can be discussed without being lost amidst the posts in another thread.
I will self-quote a post I made in the "New Cyclone 3000 w mid-drive kit" thread: https://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=69867&start=1150
RageNR said:I was thinking of higher voltage setups. 72-84v range.
In that case a fully charged pack @84v could see a sag to 72v under a 10amp load. Like in my previous statement, this is based on data I could find on the Panasonic 18650 cells from Tesla.
If you take that same theory and apply it to a charged 14s pack (14s x 4.2v = 58.8 ), the sag at 10amps might reach 50.4v. ___ 58.8/50.4 = 1.16666..., so roughly 16.7% drop.
The voltage drop from a 20s pack, 84v to 72v (84/72 = 1.666....) would actually end up being the same? 16.7%
But lets take both those at amps pulled during load. For arguments sake, lets say the motor is pulling 3000w. At 84v that's 35.71amps. At 58.8v that's 51.02amps.
If we consider cells in 8p, 35.71/8 = 4.46a while 51.02/8 = 6.38a per cell. The 18650s in particular like lower discharge rates. The lower the amp draw, the higher the maintained voltage. 6.38/4.46 = 1.43. So a 43% diff in amp draw.
I am stating the packs at fully charged voltage because that is the data I found available to examine. This is based on a discharge chart for the Panasonic 18650s.
Lets say the cells drop to 3.8v @ 4.46a draw, and 3.65v @ 6.38a. Ok, that considered... 35.71a x 3.8v = 135.7w ______ 58.8a x 3.65v = 214.62w. Diff = ~58% (this is the losses, right?)
3.8v to 3.65v is a 4.1% diff. So we have a diff of 4.1% in voltage, but the diff in wattage is 58%.
That is not 100% scientific, but the best napkin math I could muster. Please do correct me where I am wrong.
All these numbers are based on the charts provided here: https://teslamotorsclub.com/tmc/threads ... ata.45063/
The numbers I am using are based on the first chart at the 0.02 capacity mark. I had to estimate voltages based on what I could see since there are no tests at the amp ratings in the figures above.
I know my figures are not spot on, but I tried to get as close as possible.
Again, I am only stating my theory. Looks to make sense to me, but then again, lots of things do. LoL Please add some REAL math in there.![]()