The Mighty Volt
1 MW
Batteries are sold as being "C" rated at a certain figure, i.e. 1, 5, 15 etc.
What does this really mean, in layman terms?
Thanks.
What does this really mean, in layman terms?
Thanks.
wasp said:c=capacity as in you have 5ah batteries running them at 1c is 5amps 2c would be 10amps ect
if running at 5amps lasted 1 hour then running 2c 10amps(same 5amp battery) would last only 30min
SilverSurfer said:its a discharge rate, I bleieve its the c number times the number of ah in the cell. ie. For a 1c cell that is 10ah, it can push 10a. 2c for same ah is 20a.
Edit = add ---- You raise your c rate by wiring in parallel, cause that raises the amp hours. So the end equation makes more amps available. Wiring in series, keeps the amps, but raises the volts. In general, the higher c rating will also take a faster (higher amp) charge.
wasp said:c=capacity as in you have 5ah batteries running them at 1c is 5amps 2c would be 10amps ect
if running at 5amps lasted 1 hour then running 2c 10amps(same 5amp battery) would last only 30min
katou said:First a bit of Background:
An amp represents 6.25 x 10 exponent 18 electrons (or a COULOMB) flowing through a wire.
An amp hour means that one coulomb's worth of electrons is passing through a wire, for a period of one hour.
a battery that is rated for 10 ah can produce 10 coulombs of electrons, over a period of 10 hours.
Problem here is that due to the Peukert Effect, batteries do not produce what they should, when discharged over shorter periods of time.
Batteries are rated by discharging them over a really long period of time, like 20 hours or longer.
However, in the real world, we discharge them in a period of 5 hours. The shorter the period of discharge, the more pronounced the loss of power.
So, our 10 ah battery was tested for the 10 ah rating by discharging over 20 hrs, 1/2 amp load, voila, 10 ah.
We discharge it in 5 hours, and we find we get 8 ah out. Hmm, Peukert effect sucks.
We discharge it in 2 hrs, and we find we get 6 ah out. Peukert really sucks.
We discharge it in 1 hr, and we get 5 ah out. Dang.
The C rating of a battery indicates how fast it can be discharged without damaging the battery, or showing wicked voltage sag.
10 ah batt with 2c rating = spikes of up to 20 amps
10 ah batt with 10c rating = spikes of up to 100 amps
10 ah batt with 30c rating = spikes of up to 300 amps
Motors require power in uneven patterns. They are not constant load devices. They need power, a boatload of of it to combat the slight rise in the road, and a slight headwind, and all of a sudden, they don't need it anymore because the road flattened out. The spike or surge capacity of batteries is very important because of this.
Perfect example is here: http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=15704#p233590
He's got a monster motor, but it is doing poorly because the batteries are SLA and can't handle the 300A spikes that the motor needs. Performance was very poor, realizing only a fraction of the massive power that the Etek is capable of.
C rate is very, very important. If you use a larger battery, you can compensate for low C rate:
10 ah 15C A123 pack = 150a surge capacity
30ah 5c Emoli pack = 150a surge capacity
The capacity of the packs aren't equal, but the surge capacity is.
Hope this helps, I've learned from this place, just trying to give some back. If you want more about Peukert, check this site out:
http://www.smartgauge.co.uk/peukert_depth.html
Katou
dumbass said:SilverSurfer said:its a discharge rate, I bleieve its the c number times the number of ah in the cell. ie. For a 1c cell that is 10ah, it can push 10a. 2c for same ah is 20a.
Edit = add ---- You raise your c rate by wiring in parallel, cause that raises the amp hours. So the end equation makes more amps available. Wiring in series, keeps the amps, but raises the volts. In general, the higher c rating will also take a faster (higher amp) charge.
Nope! You do not increase the C rating by paralleling packs. You increase the AHs of the pack but the C rating stays the same. In other words; if you started with a 10AH pack that had a 1c rating it would be 10a. If you then paralleled 2 of these packs you would have 20AHs at 1c or 20a. Yeah, I know this sounds like the same thing and in simple terms it is but not really. The reason is if a person parallels packs of different values (and they do it all the time).
The Mighty Volt said:dumbass said:SilverSurfer said:its a discharge rate, I bleieve its the c number times the number of ah in the cell. ie. For a 1c cell that is 10ah, it can push 10a. 2c for same ah is 20a.
Edit = add ---- You raise your c rate by wiring in parallel, cause that raises the amp hours. So the end equation makes more amps available. Wiring in series, keeps the amps, but raises the volts. In general, the higher c rating will also take a faster (higher amp) charge.
Nope! You do not increase the C rating by paralleling packs. You increase the AHs of the pack but the C rating stays the same. In other words; if you started with a 10AH pack that had a 1c rating it would be 10a. If you then paralleled 2 of these packs you would have 20AHs at 1c or 20a. Yeah, I know this sounds like the same thing and in simple terms it is but not really. The reason is if a person parallels packs of different values (and they do it all the time).
So simply put, if I have cheap 1C lifepo cells and I want a pack that can provide 20Amps, or which works well with a 20Amp rated controller, then would need a 20Ah battery made from 1C cells?
The Mighty Volt said:Thanks for that.![]()
I had made up an 11Ah pack from A123 M1 cells. I knew it wouldn't last long under strain but I couldn't understand why it was lasting for as little as it did. Somebody here joked that it would last 10 minutes but you know what, that figure is not far off.
The packs being sold by Volgood, Cammy, Vtac etc are all 1c-2c packs. Not worth a damn then.
Cheers and thanks again!
katou said:Mighty Volt, what happened to your pack? Would you like to discuss the problem?
A123 cells rock, way high C, durable as hell, and apparently very tolerant of oopsies during charging. I'll be getting myself some in a few days if I get lucky (may get some toolpacks from a fixit place near here).
The explanation is all math. The math explains it all. I just wish I was good at math, I'd understand it all much better myself.
Katou
cell_man said:High C rate cells also make for a much more pleasant experience on the bike. If all your cells can do is just about deliver the required current according to the spec they will be sagging a lot. Manufacturers are not generally known for being conservative with their ratings, very optimistic/BS is often closer to the truth. This will impact on the power being delivered and will also likely lead to shortened life cycle of the pack.
A high C rate pack is also generally much less effected by the current level it is discharged at. It might deliver 95% or more of the it's capacity at 10C that it does at 1C, Whereas a 2C pack might only deliver 80-90% of it's capacity at 2C as opposed to 0.5C. High C packs might seem like a waste of time and money until you've actually tried a high power bike with a high C rate pack. The power required to give good acceleration is much more than to maintain a reasonable cruise speed but you only use that high current for some of the time. It also means that you don't need to carry round a pack twice as big as required to get the required power. IMO good cells are pretty high C rate, cheap cells are just cheap![]()
cell_man said:Well actually a 10Ah 1C rated pack will probably give you maybe 9Ah if used at it's limit, whereas a high C 10Ah pack will give you it's rated 10Ah. Added to that it will lower voltage whilst supplying those Ah. So the real picture is even worse when you consider the Whrs. A high 36V nominal 10Ah pack would give you pretty much 360Whrs. A 36V 1C pack might only maintain 32V nominal and supply say 9Ah, so total is 288Whrs or 20% less. To make the situation even worse the low C pack will trip the BMS very easily for the last 20% of the discharge as the voltage sag will be very bad and will not be able to deliver it's rated C rating.
Duct tape has got nothing to do what is inside, Cylindrical cells are not inferior to prismatic or pouch cells. Just because you put middle of the road prismatic cells into a fancy case with a fancy brand name doesn't make them better than a pack of A123 duct-taped and wrapped in a cardboard box![]()