SURRON DIY 80V / 29kW BATTERY BUILD - HOW-TO

Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары

SURRON DIY 80V / 29kW BATTERY PACK BUILD - HOW-TO
0:00 - Introduction
0:29 - Organization of This Video
1:48 - Pros - Why DIY Build a Sur-Ron Battery Pack?
3:48 - Cons - Why Not DIY Build a Sur-Ron Battery Pack?
8:44 - Nickel Strips vs. Bus Plates
10:52 - Cost Example for DIY 72V Pack
14:04 - Brief History Of The Surron Pack
19:37 - Why use 21700 cells, if the Surron is not designed for them?
20:55 - Figuring out cell layout
22:40 - Why you shouldn't glue cells together
25:50 - Finding a case - Huge problems
29:04 - Cell Holders/Spacers for 20S / 22S 9P
30:03 - Cells & Copper Bus Bars - Choosing & Finding
31:50 - Searching for Copper/Nickel Bus Bars
35:00 - Paper Insulators - Needed?
35:00 - Build Process Photos
41:30 - 45 Second How-To Build a Sur-Ron Pack
42:17 - The Actual Build Process Video!
44:55 - Best 21700 Cells to Use for a Surron Battery Pack
46:45 - Is the cost savings worth the work?
47:13 - After all the Work, $1000-$1400 For Labor Is Not Too High!
48:35 - Solving the Bus Bar Problem
53:00 - Links In Description to Buy Components
56:07 - Parts Start to Arrive, Cells Held in Customs
57:38 - Copper/Nickel Bus Bars Arrive
58:39 - V1 Metal Cases Arrive
59:00 - And, Get Ready for the Big Letdown..
1:00:30 - Next Problem... 575A BMS Doesn't Fit
1:01:50 - Finally ready to weld!
1:06:00 - 3D-Printed Case Arrives
1:08:50 - Starting to Weld
1:13:12 - Connecting the 2 Bottom Bus Plates
1:16:36 - Connecting the BMS wires
1:20:30 - Fiberglass Sheets
1:23:15 - How the Case Fits in the Bike
1:24:50 - Soldering B+ and B- wires
1:26:20 - Important Notes About ANT BMS Setup
1:28:10 - Finishing Details & Tips
1:32:52 - The Finished Battery Pack
First: Sorry this video, again, is (just a bit) long! Tried to make it as brief as possible but it covers a very involved 4-month research and build process. And, some things I repeated, sorry about that.
This covers the process of researching, finding components, and DIY building my 29kW, 80v nominal (92.4v fully charged) 22S9P high-power Surron battery pack. (Note - same steps apply if you're building a 60v, 72v, or 80v battery pack - and for the Surron or Talaria.)
There wasn't a whole lot of info about DIY Sur-Ron pack builds online, so I thought I'd document the process. The Surron pack requires some specialized parts, and is super-compacted into the available space, so it's been the most difficult pack to build of the 15 I have done since 2015. Yes, you can save over $1000 by building the pack yourself, and yes, it's satisfying to complete, but I do NOT recommend building the Surron pack as your first battery build. Do some simple packs, and study battery theory, first before trying this.
Pack Specs:
22S9P / Samsung 40T / 21700
80V Nominal / 92.4V fully charged
36Ah, 2880 watt-hours
Max 315A, 29.1 kW
COMPONENTS USED FOR BATTERY PACK:
Cells - Samsung 40T 21700:
www.imrbatteries.com/samsung-...
www.nkon.nl/ru/samsung-inr217...
BMS - Ant BMS 8-22S 130A Continuous / 325A Peak:
a.aliexpress.com/_EIsyz69
Bus Bars/Plates - Custom Copper/Nickel Bus Bars (22S9P/20S9P):
coolwatts.co/products/Copper-...
Cell Spacers - Custom 21700 Offset Spacers for 20S/22S 9P Configuration:
coolwatts.co/products/Cell-Sp...
Case - Metal 160x139x420mm (Fits Talaria):
coolwatts.co/products/Metal-B...
Case - Metal 160x139x420mm, Diagonal Cut Corners (Fits Surron):
coolwatts.co/products/Metal-B...
Case - 3D Printed 158.5 x 136 x 422mm, Fits Surron - Free .STL Files:
drive.google.com/file/d/1voKe...
Welder I Used - MinderRC DH30 MAX V2:
a.aliexpress.com/_EJ4nVTB
COMPONENTS FOR MY 29kW FRAME-UP SURRON BUILD:
**Coming Soon
I'm adding chapters to make the video easier to navigate. If you want to skip ahead to the building process clips, feel free, I know it's long.
Feel free to leave comments and questions; I'll try to answer any questions.
Thanks for watching!
My old channel, with 72v BBSHD and Tangent Ascent videos:
CALIFORNIA ELECTROBIKE UKRAINE
‪@californiaelectrobikeukrai5074‬

Пікірлер: 89

  • @hunter.on.channel.19
    @hunter.on.channel.1910 күн бұрын

    My man...this is 1 very sexy pack! Well built, great job!

  • @mario_on_e-odin2.0
    @mario_on_e-odin2.05 күн бұрын

    Excelent video !!! I have different bike and battery and does not need to build a battery but your video is so great that I had to watch it till the end :) Do not appologize for the length of the video, you shared a ton of useful informations and that takes time, it is much better this way that a short video. Plus this is a perfect example how to make an instructional video, I have to learn a lot :) Great job, keep on ! Subscribed.

  • @imho7250
    @imho725011 күн бұрын

    First of all, this is such an amazing video. Definitely something personal should watch before making a high power pack. @1:27:00 there are two different ANT boot up wire type: 2 black wires are just connected to a momentary on switch, normally accessible on the outside of the battery case. Red and black wire needs a 3v-5v source. Worthless in most cases. Lol I have both versions. Since you installed your ANT correctly, not cutting off 3 of the 4 power cables that ensure current is distributed correctly across the mosfets, you might be able to get longer times at higher amps. As you can see in settings, there are 3 discharge current zones, each with its own time limit. Zone 1, 0a to max continuous, no time limit. As long as the MOS temp doesn’t get hot you can bump this up some. Zone 2. Max continues to peak. This has a time limit. You can set it to several minutes if you want. Zone 3: peak discharge to short circuit protection. This can be set for a few seconds just to cover a minor surge from the controller. Zone 4: short circuit cutoff, normally set in microseconds. Should be set as low as possible that doesn’t hinder zone 3, but high enough to allow pre charge of the capacitors in the controller. Just monitor your app for temperature and test it when doing the current limit, but the ANT normally under rates the values. It does have thermal protection that will shut down the BMS but it’s important to limit current to something that takes several seconds to reach overtemp so the BMS can shut down before frying. Of course you have to juggle between the BMS and the controller settings so there is no conflict. I use fardriver with boost (which also has a timer) so my normal line current is set within the ANT continuous amps zone and the boost current is in the peak current zone (2), with a time limit shorter than that set in the ANT. I think if you monitor the app you will see the ANT stays cool as a cucumber in normal operation. To limit heat in the battery and BMS, after the first top balance, you can set balance current to 20 milliamps and it will still do its job and not make much heat.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    11 күн бұрын

    Awesome information! Thank you so much. I've been in communication with Ant, and they now have a great BMS for these Surron/Talaria packs: 17-24S, 220A continuous/ 550A peak, and small enough to fit on top easily. Wish it had been available when I did this build. Next time! antbms.vip/product/ant-bms-17s-24s-50a-380a-smart-52v-88v-lifepo4-li-ion-lto-battery-protection-board/

  • @imho7250

    @imho7250

    11 күн бұрын

    @@CoolWatts , yes, ANT has made huge advances in just the last few years. They are dirt cheap and very reliable and available in power ranges for the biggest controllers made for ebikes. There are so many ways to set up balancing on the ANT for my EXGF I set it to automatically balance each time it’s fully charged. Basically default settings. But for my own I disable automatic balancing by setting the prerequisites too high, and then I periodically initiate a balance to 0.000v differential. Then I do a health check, checking voltage sag at peak amps, and the cell differential at peak amps, then discharge the pack until resting differential is 0.100v, which generally means at least one brick is heading South. Making note of the cycle AH change which should be about 50% of the battery AH rating. Then fully charge without allowing balancing. The first time its to get baseline readings. I would expect your pack to have some quirky cell differential jumps under peak load every 4 cells since there is a copper wire between this cells instead of directly tab to tab connection. And resting differential after full charge should come back to within 0.002v differential. Then I just monitor that differential at top balance and once it gets over 0.005v i will balance to 0.000v again and start a fresh monitoring period. As you can imagine only a small percentage of people even care whats going on in their battery but since you took a lot of time to make it, you might be ine who wants to see how its health is trending. My health monitoring showed me some bricks I damaged during construction (burned holes in the bottom during spot welding) were slowly increasing their self discharge rate, so I was able to teardown the pack before it got out of hand (cell self-discharging fast enough to get hot). One of your viewers made a couple of 30a 20AH lipo packs with ANT BMS but still waiting for the test results under load.

  • @jameshamilton9819
    @jameshamilton98192 ай бұрын

    Just wanted to say thank you so much for your super hard work on this video, people like you make our hobby possible.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    2 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Glad it helped)

  • @The205GTIman
    @The205GTIman3 ай бұрын

    Nice vid! Some remarks/suggestions for other builders: - if you are building for max power (amps * volts) instead of range, you could opt for Samsung 30T instead of 40T. The 30T can handle more amps; up to 50A is possible during acceleration bursts whereas 40T can provide up to some 40A or 30A without too much voltage drop. At these high current levels per cell, the 30T actually has more capacity/higher volts than the 40T (look at test curves >30A). This way, you can create very powerful very lightweight batteries! - you should always design for off-design situations (contradictio in terminis..) where the battery is failing due to overheating. So indeed cover the places where you run the bms wires (also small ones) with fire resistant paper, and cover each wire with its own layer of kapton tape. Preferably use heat resistant silicone wire for all wires, also the small ones. Always install temperature cutoff sensors (ant bms has them as well). These measures buy you a little more time when things start to overheat. - if you are using simple rows with parallel cells, you don’t need spacers or glue at all. Just wrap each row in a layer of kapton tape, and then wrap all rows together using kapton tape as well. The spot welding and/or soldering will keep everything firmly together, and if a cell ever fails, it is much easier to remove and replace this cell when everything is not glued or clicked together with spacers. - the bus bars look like a nice and easy solution, but if you are planning on running 50a through each 30T cell like me, I think the resistance is still too high. I would suggest soldering copper braided wire in series on top of each cell like I do. If you solder very quickly with a large powerful soldering ion + cool the solder with a wet towel immediately after soldering, the cells don’t overheat and are not damaged. I have built all packs in this way and all rows have full capacity and have lasted for years already. But be very careful not to melt a short; please know what you are doing and use heat resistant paper spacers for the plus side of the cells. - if possible, please always install an active balancer (based on capacitors) in addition to the bms. The bms is very slow and bad at balancing rows, and only balances at the highest voltage level. A balancer always balances also at the bottom. To this extent, attach an extra set of ‘thin bms wires’ for the active balancer. If you attach an on/off switch to the active balancer, you can prevent it from draining the battery when it is stored for a prolonged period of time. These are just my experiences; your vid is already very helpful to others!

  • @user-hj8xd8rd3y
    @user-hj8xd8rd3y4 ай бұрын

    Do video about 50s im very interested because everybody is using them im usingthem i dont get overheat 20 amps !!

  • @dlyer
    @dlyer3 ай бұрын

    This is a great video. Thank you so much! I own a Talaria Sting R and have been looking into upgrading the battery. I have built a few packs before and I'm seriously considering building my own for the Talaria as well. I have been looking for this exact video to push me over the edge and get going 😅 And I totally agree with you, the worst part of buildning a battery pack is to solder thoose thick wires!

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for the feedback 😃

  • @Calthecool
    @Calthecool3 ай бұрын

    It's crazy how common it is to use Nickel to make battery packs, considering it's only a quarter as conductive as copper.

  • @DescartesRenegade

    @DescartesRenegade

    3 ай бұрын

    Spotwelding copper still requires nickel.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    I had always used nickel strips for all 14 packs I built up until this one, but in my research I saw the really high-end battery builders were using these copper/nickel bus bars. So then began the long, arduous search to find them!

  • @bhendy2962
    @bhendy29622 ай бұрын

    Dude.. your the man! So appreciated all of this.. motivated me to do it!

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    2 ай бұрын

    Awesome, thank you!

  • @ElectricBikeLaboratory
    @ElectricBikeLaboratory4 ай бұрын

    Major props! This is a tremendous resource you're sharing! Well done!!

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @mardellone4202

    @mardellone4202

    4 ай бұрын

    Agreed, this is huge!! :)

  • @christianwagner6244
    @christianwagner62443 ай бұрын

    Was thinking of doing the exact same and Iam really happy to see that somebody else went this route and provides the parts for DIYers :) Still, I´ll purchase a battery from a known builder here in Germany, as he manages to fit 22s12p with bms in only 38cm!! Ofcourse, no spacers but you get so much more energy in that I couldn´t care less.

  • @valentinkaminskiy3826
    @valentinkaminskiy38262 ай бұрын

    Pure knowledge, hat off.

  • @PizzaCologne3
    @PizzaCologne33 ай бұрын

    bruh, life saver thank you, you got a sub

  • @ianmangham4570
    @ianmangham45703 ай бұрын

    You did a gradeA job, absolutely fantastic 👏 🇬🇧👍🙏

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @Calthecool
    @Calthecool3 ай бұрын

    For the connection on the bottom of the pack, could you lay the bottom of both sides end to end, weld a double length copper/nickel plate, then fold the two halves together? I've done something similar with nickel strips, it could negate the need for the soldered connection.

  • @juice9767
    @juice97674 ай бұрын

    💯 Great Job 👌

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you! 😊

  • @adamm3492
    @adamm349219 күн бұрын

    I have a few DIY ebikes and love them since I can use a small gas generator in a trailer behind me and a fast charger to extend my range significantly depending on our average expenditure of the battery. On ECO mode the battery use is very small. More importantly for my Talaria I can't figure out a way to bypass the element that keeps us from running the ebike whilst riding. I was hoping you might know how to do this???

  • @boardinrider
    @boardinrider3 ай бұрын

    Nice Job man! I Designed a case that is made for me from Sendcutsend out of aluminum that holds a JBD colour display

  • @kevind1893
    @kevind18933 ай бұрын

    Great job on the video! Very good information presented and covering safety was a big plus. For some reason none of the cool watts links are working for me. Thanks!

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Hi, thanks. Links should be working ok now.

  • @uptown94500
    @uptown945003 ай бұрын

    great build next time i would follow your advice ! you think i be ok with a 50s pack 20s 6p for a bbshd 3kw peak already bought the cells too late too cancel

  • @andreyl2705
    @andreyl27053 ай бұрын

    awesome)

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @Gersberms
    @Gersberms3 ай бұрын

    Super impressive, those bus bars are pieces of art! The longer I look, the more impressed I am by your knowledge and design choices. One thing that surprises me is the sizes of the conductors. Have you calculated the conductor cross section area across the pack, BMS, and wires? The wires to the plug seem to be 6 gauge, which is apparently around 13.3 mm2. Is that really enough for 325 A? I suppose it's fine at peak load but not sustained. Anyway, point being, I think the cross section area differs wildly from place to place so have you not been overthinking the bus bars? Another edit: so they are overkill, 0.3 mm x 140 mm = 42 mm2, that's way bigger than your 6 gauge wire. But they're super beautiful.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Agreed, those bus bars are beautiful, too bad they're hidden in the final build. I think 6AWG is fine for these short lengths, other batt manufacturers I've seen like EBMX are also using 6 gauge. The bus bars should definitely handle more than 300 amps, for now I wanted to conservatively state 300 as that's the value the manufacturer has tested them to so far. I hope to test them a little harder!)

  • @UnderARockProd
    @UnderARockProd2 ай бұрын

    This may sound a bit insane lol but You should TOTALLY do an online class showing people how to make a battery from scratch while being able to have someone knowledgable on the subject (you) there incase they come across any questions or issues. Something low commitment like once or twice a week for 2-4 hours or so... You could make a list of supplies and tools needed ahead of time and then just walk the class through the steps and double check their work to make sure they are doing everything properly as they go. I know I would 100 percent take a class like that as long as it was specified for the light bee and I know a few people that have shown interest in building their own batteries that would likely be interested in such a class. I know this video shows the steps but I think that while many of us want to build our own batteries I think many of us are worried about making small mistakes that could have potentially serious repercussions. Having a “teacher” so to speak would make people like me much more comfortable and confident in our final product. And since like you said the price for making a battery is about half what the top companies are charging, you still have a good amount of wiggle room to choose a price that you feel is fair (per person) and still saves the students some money without doing it for a price that’s unfair to you. You could even do it as a one on one kinda thing and charge people by the hour as you may have some people that only have a few questions and others that would need a full walk through.

  • @ianmangham4570
    @ianmangham45703 ай бұрын

    Moli cells kick ass 😮

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Agreed, if I was to do it again now, I'd just pay a little more and get the P45B.

  • @ianmangham4570
    @ianmangham45703 ай бұрын

    Fantastic 😅, drives me insane 😅

  • @paulhope3401
    @paulhope3401Ай бұрын

    Regarding having space between cells being better for cooling? Unless you have actual airflow moving through the battery it will most definately have inferior cooling. Still Air is far too good an insulator vs metal to metal battery case heat conduction which at least should provide some heat transfer to be cooled by the outer casing... if.... the casing was designed to be in contact with the batterys sides.

  • @TomTom-gx1sm
    @TomTom-gx1sm14 күн бұрын

    Hey man, I got a small EUC from Gotway I got a few years back, do you think I should rebuild this one before doing a Talaria battery ?

  • @nicod974
    @nicod9743 ай бұрын

    I'm unsure about the spot welder.

  • @Leonid.Y
    @Leonid.YАй бұрын

    Прикольно, потрібно і собі таке ж зібрати.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    26 күн бұрын

    Dyakyu

  • @repayable3808
    @repayable3808Ай бұрын

    Hey, im thinking about making one of these; instead of soldering the two plates on the top with wires could you just weld a copper plate to attach them instead?

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    Ай бұрын

    You can try, if you have a powerful enough welder.

  • @akinnon2000
    @akinnon20002 күн бұрын

    very nice build, very clean, but i dont understand the cells choice. They give 20a each but only have 2500 mah. Why not go all the way directly to 21700 molicels p42a or Samsung 30T? You would get insane discharge, very high capacity and insane charge rate. If you want to stay in 18650 there is Samsung 30Q.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    2 күн бұрын

    40T are 4000mAh cells that do 35A. Thus the pack's total 36Ah capacity.

  • @enekojuanenalodeiro3794
    @enekojuanenalodeiro37943 ай бұрын

    ye, I need to know if this copper busbars could be done with 1 mm copper please, where have you found them?

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Hi - for now we only have the configurations shown, 22S9P and 20S9P, 0.3mm bus bars, specifically to fit the Surron case size.

  • @kekebmx426
    @kekebmx4263 ай бұрын

    Hi, thanks for the video, so much knowledge you share! How come alot of battery manufacturers use samsung 50s here in europe? I'm waiting for a 72v50ah battery with 50s and I'm quite scared now 😅. Is it still ok for 15kw ? Cheers

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your comment! Yes, I suppose I'm pretty hard on the poor little 50S! 😂 50ah means 10 parallel, so you should be ok pulling like 150A from the pack. 200A would be 20A per cell, which I would make a momentary peak, not continuous. Maybe it's not too late to cancel the order and build it yourself?!!!! Now that you know how to do it) Edit: I thought the same thing, why do so many use the 50S, and not only in Europe? I think it's a false economy - thinking you can get the higher capacity without any compromise in either power output or cycle life. Obviously Samsung had to make compromises to get the higher capacity. And I think they are falsely advertising it as a 25A cell. It's like - you want big capacity, big amps, and low price? Pick two. The only cells now that really provide both are the P45B and P50B. 45 is 6+ euros, and 50 will be 10-12 euros!

  • @kekebmx426

    @kekebmx426

    3 ай бұрын

    Thanks alot for your answer. Honestly I'm not ready to go through the process just yet. I guess I'll stick with what I bought, knowing it might not be the best cell option. At least when I'm ready to get building, I know alot more about cell choice, thanks again. New question in my head now is, given the tight space, how do local manufacturers fit 20s10p in such compact cases ?

  • @user-nr5wt8wc3l
    @user-nr5wt8wc3l2 ай бұрын

    Hey bro any way I can reach out to you personally? I have some questions about a 96v 45ah pack I’m building! Thank you

  • @marianmazgut4289
    @marianmazgut42894 ай бұрын

    So if I get it right, you are using only 130Amps (10,4kW nominal) continuous ? Since the BMS is 130 / 325 for a few seconds ? Thanks

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    4 ай бұрын

    Kind of. At full charge it's about 12kW continuous. That 325A is rated for 10 seconds. In the Ant BMS app, I saw an adjustable cut-off limit of 200A which I believe is for 30 seconds. Haven't even finished the bike yet, been waiting 2.5 months on wheels, and it's still winter in Ukraine. Obviously the limit is related to heat, so will see how it holds up under real-world riding conditions. Good thing is you can monitor BMS and cell temps via the app. But yes, definitely the limiting factor in this build is the BMS. Sucks the 575A can't fit in there. It might be possible if the BMS went in a separate "appendage" box on the side, like some do, but I'm not a fan of that design. Edit: would be great if Ant made a higher amp BMS with the same 147mm length, but a bit higher or wider. That would still fit in the Surron case. Say, 200A/400A would be great. Need to ask them about it.

  • @marianmazgut4289

    @marianmazgut4289

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks, do you think that 8Awg for doing 120Amps and in fututre max 170Amps will be enough ? The website said 150-200Amps.@@CoolWatts

  • @gh00st.u4r
    @gh00st.u4r12 күн бұрын

    Hey can some one send me a link to this qs8 connector?

  • @oleksandrkozachok4714
    @oleksandrkozachok47142 күн бұрын

    Привіт з України! Дуже крутий пак і надзвичайно професійна робота. Після війни, якщо виживу, буду будувати собі Ebike, тож батарею буду робити по твоєму мануалу. Дякую друже!

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    2 күн бұрын

    Duje dyakyu za commentary! I'm American but live in Kherson, can't wait to go back home. Soon! Good luck with your battery build. To victory. Heryoam Slava! 🇺🇦

  • @oleksandrkozachok4714

    @oleksandrkozachok4714

    2 күн бұрын

    @@CoolWatts Kherson is my city!!! It's amazing 😁

  • @jimmyshelby340
    @jimmyshelby34022 күн бұрын

    Hello, this is ANT bms factory, shall we have conncetion?

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes! I'd love to speak with you about developing a higher Amp capacity BMS specifically for Surron/Talaria that fits within the case dimensions. Email: support@coolwatts.co

  • @FlyingKechup
    @FlyingKechup26 күн бұрын

    you said there are some companies that can build a battery for around the same price can you add some links of those companies

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    26 күн бұрын

    Amorge sells packs I've seen for about $300-500 above parts cost. But I can't speak to build quality, safety, if they use genuine cells, copper/nickel bus bars, etc.

  • @user-xv5iw5zh4m
    @user-xv5iw5zh4m3 ай бұрын

    Bro, you should have made the bus plate for connecting the two halves of the battery as one solid piece: first you would weld the entire battery in one piece and after that simply fold it in half. That would save you the hassle of soldering the two halves together, would save you space and would eliviate any mechanical stress from the bus bars if the fold wouldn't stick out passed the cells when folded. By the way, can you share the info on the manufacturer of custom bus bars? Wanna squeeze a battery pack to my kickscooter, and need a flat bus bar from the positive end to the bms end of the battery, since wires wount fit (

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    I thought about doing it that way. Saw one guy did this. But I don't like the mechanical stress it puts on the welds, and I worry about doing a hard 180 degree fold/bend in 0.3mm copper. The wires only add about 4mm, and if I ever need to take it apart in the future to replace a bad cell this way will be easier.

  • @user-xv5iw5zh4m

    @user-xv5iw5zh4m

    3 ай бұрын

    @@CoolWatts the bend is not a problem - copper is ductile. And the stress is nonexistent if you fold it correctly.

  • @meanflowt
    @meanflowt3 ай бұрын

    оцэ канешно жоска...страшно представить как едет эта телега!!

  • @legna199111
    @legna1991113 ай бұрын

    I would watch out with those Chinese BMS they dont always dk active cell balancing usually only capable of reading voltage and shutting down if lucky

  • @The205GTIman

    @The205GTIman

    3 ай бұрын

    Ant bms is actually a great bms; their bms-es are powerful, reliable and very customizable through the app. You can set the desired start and stop voltage for balancing. Balancing is max 200mA in total i think for the 300a peak version. It is not active balancing, so it is better to add an additional active balancer based on capacitors if you can find the required space in your build. The app shows voltage levels for each row and also in total. It also shows total power draw, which is very useful if you want to calibrate a custom shunt resistor for your system, e.g. a modified shunt in your controller or a separate shunt for a cycle analyst. Ant bms is the go to bms for all my high power builds!

  • @bibekmandal3718
    @bibekmandal37183 ай бұрын

    How much range in this battery

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Hi, it's 2880 watt hours, which is about 50% more than the stock Surron pack. You could get a bit more range/capacity with the Molicel P42A or P45B. The bike I built from scratch and haven't ridden it yet to test range, but I will. It's still winter where I am, and also I've been waiting on wheels for 3 months.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    2 ай бұрын

    Update - tested range a couple times, and I'm getting about 80km. Riding on average 50-60 km/hour. Honestly, I was expecting a little more, but it's still not bad. P45B would add 10%+ to that.

  • @Shreddylife
    @ShreddylifeАй бұрын

    Man with the knowledge you know you could start your own company and sell these for a major profit. If you need an investor let me know lol

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    Ай бұрын

    Too much labor!! 🤣

  • @ssj4bulma537
    @ssj4bulma537Ай бұрын

    do you sell batteries?

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    Ай бұрын

    No. But components for DIY battery builds, including the copper/nickel bus bars, are available on my site: coolwatts.co/

  • @ssj4bulma537

    @ssj4bulma537

    Ай бұрын

    @@CoolWatts awesome. probably gonna wind up ordering from amorge right now, just because i need a battery asap. but def gonna look into building some in the future. this video was SOOOO helpful. you dont even understand. thank you so much for the time and effort you put into gathering this info. seriously has everything anybody could ask

  • @powchainsamaniego6744
    @powchainsamaniego67443 ай бұрын

    Surron don't need 72volt

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, they need 80v! 😉

  • @bigkick86

    @bigkick86

    2 ай бұрын

    When you hit 93mph on bac4000 KO motor and 60v..yeah..agreed! So explain benefit of 80v. Thanks!😊

  • @paulhope3401

    @paulhope3401

    Ай бұрын

    ​@bigkick86 P= V x I (Power =Volts x Amps) If you have say the same 6kW as stock but with higher voltage and lower amperage, In theory it should run cooler due to amperage being responsible for creating heat. How much of a difference it makes to make it worth doing, I'm not so sure.

  • @Fighter4Street
    @Fighter4Street3 ай бұрын

    I just want to comment that it is incorrect information about gluing your pack and not being able to replace a bad cell. This is false information and you can replace a cell in a bad pack and I have. You can remove the cell by just knocking it out of the pack, the cell will come out of its wrapping by knocking it out. Then you just carefully remove the glue and remove the wrapping left in that cell hole and insert a new cell. I have done this before on a pack. The cells are not so tightly glued together and there is a bit of space to work with. I even had packs I messed up with and just unglued the whole pack fairly quickly with isopropyl alcohol. Isopropyl alcohol just kills the hot glue and unsticks it very easily. This is incorrect information and you have a lot of things you can do to replace a bad cell with just a little bit of time and I have done this. I recommend to glue the pack together because you save so much room and don't need a pack sticking up out of your bike and can keep the bike looking stock. The heat is a non-issue because these packs don't seem to get that hot and I've used packs glued together which never had any issues due to heat.

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Cool that you have done it successfully. I still would never try removing a cell from a glued-together pack.

  • @Fighter4Street

    @Fighter4Street

    3 ай бұрын

    @@CoolWatts Yeah, it seems difficult but the cell just pushes right out of its plastic wrapping. These cells actually have quite strong walls. Probably best doing it outside just for safety. I do believe I applied some Isopropyl Alcohol to try and loosen the glue but the cell just came out of its wrapping. Thinking about it, to make it easier, probably should have cut the wrapping at the edges of the cell so it just pushes right out easily, I bet that is all that is holding the cell in is where it wraps around the edges.

  • @powchainsamaniego6744
    @powchainsamaniego67443 ай бұрын

    It's cost not that much

  • @CoolWatts

    @CoolWatts

    3 ай бұрын

    Uhh.... okay? I'll tell my accountant

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