I rest my case. Goodbye.
[Addendum for the benefit of confused onlookers]
P2250001.JPG
Above is a photo of the BMS pcb for the A123 gen II starter battery. Note that there are no relays here (or anywhere else in the battery), switching instead being done by the two banks of large FETs. Current can be cut off for only charge, only discharge, or both. 550 CCA rated, every unit is tested to deliver that amount of current. Cells are Amp 20's in 4S4P or 4S3P. The main microprocessor holds thousands of lines of code. The product specification is 93 pages long, and includes several state diagrams, some of them quite large and complex. A few features:
1) Low volts cutoff. If pack voltage falls below 10 Volts, discharge current is interrupted until battery is charged back up over 10 Volts. If any cell falls below 0.5 Volts, the pack is permanently disabled, since it is no longer safe to charge. THIS IS A REQUIREMENT FOR EVERY OEM.
2) High volts cutoff. Charge current is shut off if any cell reaches 3.9 Volts. THIS IS A REQUIREMENT FOR EVERY OEM.
3) Cell balancing. All four cell voltages are monitored directly. Above 3.6 Volts, balancers are turned on full for 300 mA of balance current. Below this, balancers are PWM'd for lower current until the cell voltage reaches 3.585 Volts. (Error margin in the voltage measurement dictates a number just below 3.600.) Safety and reliability requirements make this a de facto OEM requirement.
4) Temperature sensing. Two thermistors in the module and two on the pcb provide thermal protection for the cells and FETs respectively. Charge current can be limited at extreme low temps, and the pack can be completely disabled if too hot to guard against permanent failure. Safety and reliability requirements make this a de facto OEM requirement.
5) Communication. In OEM applications, the pack communicates with the car over LIN (Local Interface Network). Alternator output will be adjusted to optimize battery performance based on data streaming from the pack to the car's main controller. Error/service messages for the driver are also supported.
6) Data logging. There is an extensive list of histograms, event counters, and other data capturing tools that provide all kinds of historical data for the unit in case it is needed for troubleshooting or failure analysis. When not in use, the battery goes into a sleep mode, but still wakes up periodically to make sure nothing has gone awry and log data.
There are indeed LFP 12 Volt batteries out there with no electronics in them. Most are sold as motorcycle/racing batteries. They can do this because there are no real requirements for the aftermarket--until you manage to kill a few people. Then, beancounters who recognize the cost of a wrongful death lawsuit, or government regulators step in to stop the irresponsible behavior of the manufacturer/designers. As stated in the thread at ES on Ballistic's motorcycle batteries, this has been a disaster for users of these packs, who are experiencing huge failure rates and a shorter life span than the LA batteries they replaced. I've seen others that have balancers and nothing else inside. There is nothing preventing gross overcharge or damage by overdischarge in those batteries. It's a recipe for abysmal performance or worse.
Our friend SK apparently believes his knowledge is so great that he can divine operational details of very complex systems simply by reading the advertising copy for them, or from media reports that give the most scant technical details. Reality strongly suggests otherwise. You have been warned.
[Addendum for the benefit of confused onlookers]
P2250001.JPG
Above is a photo of the BMS pcb for the A123 gen II starter battery. Note that there are no relays here (or anywhere else in the battery), switching instead being done by the two banks of large FETs. Current can be cut off for only charge, only discharge, or both. 550 CCA rated, every unit is tested to deliver that amount of current. Cells are Amp 20's in 4S4P or 4S3P. The main microprocessor holds thousands of lines of code. The product specification is 93 pages long, and includes several state diagrams, some of them quite large and complex. A few features:
1) Low volts cutoff. If pack voltage falls below 10 Volts, discharge current is interrupted until battery is charged back up over 10 Volts. If any cell falls below 0.5 Volts, the pack is permanently disabled, since it is no longer safe to charge. THIS IS A REQUIREMENT FOR EVERY OEM.
2) High volts cutoff. Charge current is shut off if any cell reaches 3.9 Volts. THIS IS A REQUIREMENT FOR EVERY OEM.
3) Cell balancing. All four cell voltages are monitored directly. Above 3.6 Volts, balancers are turned on full for 300 mA of balance current. Below this, balancers are PWM'd for lower current until the cell voltage reaches 3.585 Volts. (Error margin in the voltage measurement dictates a number just below 3.600.) Safety and reliability requirements make this a de facto OEM requirement.
4) Temperature sensing. Two thermistors in the module and two on the pcb provide thermal protection for the cells and FETs respectively. Charge current can be limited at extreme low temps, and the pack can be completely disabled if too hot to guard against permanent failure. Safety and reliability requirements make this a de facto OEM requirement.
5) Communication. In OEM applications, the pack communicates with the car over LIN (Local Interface Network). Alternator output will be adjusted to optimize battery performance based on data streaming from the pack to the car's main controller. Error/service messages for the driver are also supported.
6) Data logging. There is an extensive list of histograms, event counters, and other data capturing tools that provide all kinds of historical data for the unit in case it is needed for troubleshooting or failure analysis. When not in use, the battery goes into a sleep mode, but still wakes up periodically to make sure nothing has gone awry and log data.
There are indeed LFP 12 Volt batteries out there with no electronics in them. Most are sold as motorcycle/racing batteries. They can do this because there are no real requirements for the aftermarket--until you manage to kill a few people. Then, beancounters who recognize the cost of a wrongful death lawsuit, or government regulators step in to stop the irresponsible behavior of the manufacturer/designers. As stated in the thread at ES on Ballistic's motorcycle batteries, this has been a disaster for users of these packs, who are experiencing huge failure rates and a shorter life span than the LA batteries they replaced. I've seen others that have balancers and nothing else inside. There is nothing preventing gross overcharge or damage by overdischarge in those batteries. It's a recipe for abysmal performance or worse.
Our friend SK apparently believes his knowledge is so great that he can divine operational details of very complex systems simply by reading the advertising copy for them, or from media reports that give the most scant technical details. Reality strongly suggests otherwise. You have been warned.
Comment