That would be primarily up to you and your BMS, not the charger.
Quickly? This outfit makes some nice "quick" chargers.
http://www.manzanitamicro.com/products?page=shop.browse&category_id=14&vmcchk=1
major
That would be primarily up to you and your BMS, not the charger.that doesn't blow up the battery pack
Steep learning curve??Jeeez Duncan !
The guy doesnt even know what voltage is needed to charge...
...and you are encouraging him to try a "bad boy" set up.![]()
..or short life !Steep learning curve??
Hi J,... 3500mahs and my configuration is 23 in parallel and 30 in series = 100Ah 96V. ...
So close - just a couple of typos:watt hour per mile= 96Vx (65ah/74.5mph)= 83.75.
96v x 100ah=9600w
If the motor is getting 65 amps at 96 volts, that's 6240 watts, not 4200 watts... so something is not right. Perhaps you are looking at current to the motor from the controller, but voltage to the controller from the battery? Perhaps the 4200 watts is output power and the motor is only 4200/6240 = 67% efficient when producing this peak output?2) how do you eyeball calculate the range for a 26s30p? as you said the range depends on the Watt hour of the battery and the motor. In my case the motor peaks power at 4200w and peaks current at 65A..top speed 74.5 miles an hour (with load). i found this formula on the web and did it based on this setup:
watt hour per mile= 96Vx (65ah/74.5mph) ....
Yes, each module can be charged independently. In case you remove one for testing, etc. So each module has a charging port. When you install the module and put it in parallel with the other, then the two charging ports should go in parallel, and you can connect one charger to charge both, or connect two chargers in parallel, one on each port. Or you can have a separate charging port in a convenient location that connects to both charging ports in parallel.1) So for charging them, do you make a charging port for every module or just do 2 modules per charging port and then do parallel charging? which is better?