Seeking a break from dodgy Chinese welders, I thought I'd get on with something else more straightforward... Boy was I wrong!
A friend gave me his e-bike battery and charger to have a look at.
It's a 36v 15a 10 cell system which has a 42v charger.
The charger is the type which shows a red LED whilst charging and a green when charged. The charger was displaying only green.
Measuring the battery voltage on the output read 36v. Only when any kind of load was connected, the voltage dropped to zero.
Opening the unit up, bypassing the BMS and connecting a 120v lamp to the batteries revealed that the batteries held a charge nicely, so I ordered a 'compatible' replacement BMS. Only problem being is that the Chinese replacement appears to be not working!
The BMS is the type which has three fat negative wires, B- (battery), C- (charging) and P- (power out / discharge) as well as 11 thinner wires connecting across each cell of the battery.
Partial schematic is below along with the new BMS board
Anyways, after installing the new board, the charger now displays the red LED as it charges the system. So far so good...
What it doesn't do, is have any electrical connection between the 'P-' output and the positive side of the battery bank.
That said, the B- terminal obviously does and gives a steady >36v across the batteries.
I know that the P- discharge pin is there to avoid overheating of the battery, but seeing as it isn' working, does anyone have any experience as to whether or not I am risking a lithium fire if I connect the P- power out wire directly to the B- on the BMS?
Another option could be to connect a current limiting resistor on the output -ve cable. 36v, 15 amps... Just need to confirm that the 15A is the load current and not the charge current, I suppose?
Or shall I just fuck it and see?
A friend gave me his e-bike battery and charger to have a look at.
It's a 36v 15a 10 cell system which has a 42v charger.
The charger is the type which shows a red LED whilst charging and a green when charged. The charger was displaying only green.
Measuring the battery voltage on the output read 36v. Only when any kind of load was connected, the voltage dropped to zero.
Opening the unit up, bypassing the BMS and connecting a 120v lamp to the batteries revealed that the batteries held a charge nicely, so I ordered a 'compatible' replacement BMS. Only problem being is that the Chinese replacement appears to be not working!
The BMS is the type which has three fat negative wires, B- (battery), C- (charging) and P- (power out / discharge) as well as 11 thinner wires connecting across each cell of the battery.
Partial schematic is below along with the new BMS board
Anyways, after installing the new board, the charger now displays the red LED as it charges the system. So far so good...
What it doesn't do, is have any electrical connection between the 'P-' output and the positive side of the battery bank.
That said, the B- terminal obviously does and gives a steady >36v across the batteries.
I know that the P- discharge pin is there to avoid overheating of the battery, but seeing as it isn' working, does anyone have any experience as to whether or not I am risking a lithium fire if I connect the P- power out wire directly to the B- on the BMS?
Another option could be to connect a current limiting resistor on the output -ve cable. 36v, 15 amps... Just need to confirm that the 15A is the load current and not the charge current, I suppose?
Or shall I just fuck it and see?

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