Found one supplier selling the kit for around £24:You can buy new empty cases for the 20 Cell versions;
View attachment 53166
But not cheap, around £40.
Found one supplier selling the kit for around £24:You can buy new empty cases for the 20 Cell versions;
View attachment 53166
But not cheap, around £40.
I'm finding this very intriguing, because two 6Ah packs with 20A continuous discharge capability, would do for my shorter journeys. What makes me nervous is the soldering!One thing to note is that the max current for decent 3.5 Ah batteries is around 10A. This is less than for the 1.3 Ah cells, which are rated at 15 A. However, this should be fine as there are two strings, giving 20A capability and it's very unlikely you'd put this on a bike where you wanted to draw mare than 15A total. If you are worried about it, you could drop to 3 Ah cells that are 15A capable, but then the total capacity drops to 6 Ah.
You could make a double battery mount and then have the option of up to 14Ah.
If you settled for 6Ah, you could have 2p x 3 Ah cells with a higher current rating than for 2p x 3.5 Ah cells for giving 7Ah, so potentially higher than 20A for a 2p setup. However, it would be good to know what the PCB rating is - that will most likely be the component that becomes the bottle neck, I'm not sure what it's rating is.I'm finding this very intriguing, because two 6Ah packs with 20A continuous discharge capability, would do for my shorter journeys. What makes me nervous is the soldering!
Same kit on ebay for £25.20 from China. It's almost a dead cert getting refunded on ebay - much easier than AliExpress, none of their burning hoops to jump through.
GBH36V-LI Battery Case PCB Circuit Board-tools For Bosch 36V GBH36V-LI Li-ion | eBay
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Well that sort of sinks it, until we know more. They could send either one of these. "Random delivery":If you settled for 6Ah, you could have 2p x 3 Ah cells with a higher current rating than for 2p x 3.5 Ah cells for giving 7Ah, so potentially higher than 20A for a 2p setup. However, it would be good to know what the PCB rating is - that will most likely be the component that becomes the bottle neck, I'm not sure what it's rating is.
If you have two packs in parallel it would be less of a concern. Will need to do some more digging...what is the motor rating of a 36V lawn mower? I think these may be 800W. I'll have a look.Well that sort of sinks it, until we know more. They could send either one of these. "Random delivery":
Unsure which this is the other side of, looks like the second one:
No further details offered re: rating on ebay.
Even the manual doesn't say - perhaps the motor is labelled? Or you might just find a part number...If you have two packs in parallel it would be less of a concern. Will need to do some more digging...what is the motor rating of a 36V lawn mower? I think these may be 800W. I'll have a look.
I prefer the recelling option of an old pack with dead cells with known good quality cells. The Chinese kit option is interesting as it has all the Nickel strip precut and if some of the external case parts on an old battery are a bit tired, they could be replaced with new. As for the PCB, it could be a poor quality Chinese copy, or it could be the exact same PCB that is going into the Bosch product - that is the unknown. Although these genuine Bosch batteries were initially made in Poland, they have been made in China for quite some time:Given that part of the appeal of using something like a Bosch tool battery is the relatively small size, high current capacity (for the capacity of the pack) light weight and expected reliability why do you then want to start throwing likely substandard Chinese copy parts into the equation. There are plenty of other tool batteries that are much cheaper than Bosch why not just use them instead.
It would be good to know, agreed.However, it would be good to know what the PCB rating is - that will most likely be the component that becomes the bottle neck, I'm not sure what it's rating is.
It would be good to know, agreed.
This guy reports at 07:28 that he is pulling around 35A through a pair of 36V 6Ahr on a small quadbike;
This is looking more and more like a Bosch hand grenade!The wiring of the central connector suggests its for detecting when the battery is plugged in and not for sending a temperature warning to the tool.
From the picture below you can see that the bottom leaf of the central connector is connected to the -ve battery connector at the bottom of the PCB and the top leaf of the central connector goes off to the 'controller'. If you put a solid blade in the connector both leafs are shorted together and presumably the controller knows there is a tool connected. With that central connector grounded it not likely its being used to signal to the tool that there is a temperature issue.
What the charger does with that central connector might be different however.
View attachment 53275
Thats disapointing, the temperature sensor does work, if you heat it up then press the button for the voltage display the temperature warning LED does come on, but why bother ?
Rather a lot of components for what appears to be just a voltage level meter and temperature sensor.
Sure, nowt found.Did a search for the fuse part number turn up any info?