Garyjk said:
So I should go with min of BMS 50.
52 volt 20ah BMS50 battery to match my current in my BAC555 controller.
If the controller has a maximum current of 50A that it will ever draw, then yes.
Otherwise, you need a BMS that can handle the maximum current the system will ever draw. Preferably one that can handle some percentage (20-25%) more, so there is margin for safety and to keep from hammering it so that it lasts longer and is less likely to fail from a momentary system overload.
If you get a battery incapable of the current draw of the controller, you'd then need to reprogram the controller current limit to match what the battery could handle, or less, to get that safety margin--this will then reduce performance of your system.
Keep in mind that even if the BMS can handle the current, if the cells can't, the voltage sag during those loads will mean less watts to the wheel (and more wasted as heat in the cells), so the system won't perform as well as it should.
I assume the batteries on Amazon are corrected made.
I'd personally rather assume that any battery on any website is incorrectly made junk unless and until proven otherwise. It's a lot safer, and unfortunately more likely to be correct.
What brand do you recommend?
Nothing on Amazon I can think of. (there might be good ones, but I haven't seen one I know for sure is--Amazon, like Ebay and any other marketplace, is full of fake garbage).
EM3EV, Grin Tech, maybe LunaCycle (they've improved since my pack from them was made), and probably some others posted about in various "what's a good battery brand" type threads, but whose names I cannot remember right now, would be ones I would trust.
Some places that might be trusted (like UPP) have many options, and the cheaper options may not have everything you need to operate your system. You'd need to specify each option and requirement you have, including making sure the BMS they use has a balancing function built in (they don't all), or else you might not get a safely usable pack.
Additionally, it is very unfortunate, but many sellers of batteries (well, everything, really) do not know what they sell, and don't make them themselves. They generally don't understand how they're rated, or how they work, and even if they wanted to (they likely don't) they couldn't provide usefully correct information about them. Many of the ads for them don't even have info on the pack actually for sale, just generic info about the *series* of packs they sell, or a mix of jumbled info on several different kinds. Some are outright lies, some are just mistakes. But you can't know if any of it is right until you get the pack and test it, and probably actually disassemble it to see how well it is made.
Some manufacturers of batteries don't even use new, tested parts to build them with; some actually use recycled garbage cells from scrapped batteries, that may not even be the same kind of cells (brand, model, etc) for the whole pack. Some of them actually make "fake" packs, lying (often in the extreme!) about what they manufacture. The sellers don't know this is the case, or what means when they get packs from these places....

Some sellers themselves flat out lie about what they sell, knowing that it isn't what they say it is.
So...be careful out there.
I highly recommend that you post a link to whatever you are considering buying before you click the buy button, so that someone experienced with this gigantic mess

can help you make sure it is really what you need first.
