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The Panasonic 26 volt battery with this type of sleep facility is woken up by recharging, but that battery/charger combination has a third charging connection, possbly the wake-up trigger. I'm wondering if this BMS had an intended three connection charger?After that I found a thread on Endless Sphere about this BMS, where people are hacking the software todo all sorts of clever things. The BMS is quite sophisticated. Once the cells go below 3.0v, it goes to sleep and cuts off all activity to save draining the cells further. There must be a wake-up procedure, but I don't know what it is; however, there's a reset pad on the back of the PCB that would probably do it, or my method.
Hi David, no knee joint replacement for me..my age is against it too young at (41) plus my PVNS is not severe enough to affect joint so I ended having a synovectomy of the knee lining with open surgery.. I was (fortunate?) to only have localised PVNS so the knee joint itself is ok for now..but there's a 50/50 chance it could return.Just reading this thread and i see Morphix your are getting a knee replacement you may have it done already i have had 2 replacements last one was November 2012 . Hope all went well for you it takes about a year to heal or longer . My second one done in November is not as good as the last one done November 2010
Is that the blue wire you unsoldered Dave which seem to reset the BMS and allow charging?I charged up the cells to 3.5v with my BC168 charger that can do up to six at a time. That should have been enough to get it to start workng, but it didn't want to play. With some batteries, you can wake them up by unplugging and re-connecting the multipin connector, but I'd done that during charging. Everything that I checked was OK, put the charging and discharging FETs remained switched off. Then after a bit of brainstorming, I figured it out. There's a white wire directly from the battery +ve that powers the BMS, so unplugging the multipin doesn't reset the software. I unsoldered the white wire then resoldered it and bingo! Everything is working again. Now on final test. Should go back to Morphix tomorrow.
After that I found a thread on Endless Sphere about this BMS, where people are hacking the software todo all sorts of clever things. The BMS is quite sophisticated. Once the cells go below 3.0v, it goes to sleep and cuts off all activity to save draining the cells further. There must be a wake-up procedure, but I don't know what it is; however, there's a reset pad on the back of the PCB that would probably do it, or my method. Apparently you mustn't disconnect that white wire with the multipin in, otherwise it damages something. I was lucky to pull it out just in case. The white wire runs along the edge of the PCB at the top of the photo. It goes to P+ pad.
Got it. I carefully unsealed your tape handy work, spotted the white wire from your photo above, and unsoldered it (after first disconnecting the multipin connector).No. It's the white wire that runs along the top edge of the photo to the P+ pad in the corner. You can't disconnect it with the multi-pin plug in. Also, you don't have to disconnect anything. On the back of the board are two pads marked "RST". You just bridge them temporarily to reset the BMS.
Thanks Dave, I'll have a read up and see what can be done.. I have some electronics experience and plenty of parts, so maybe I'll come up with a clever solution that leaves the battery entirely sealed and an outside inline cabled reset option button. But for now, the reset slide switch I've soldered in seems to be working fine, and I'm just glad to be back on the road.There's a lot of useful information about this BMS in these two threads including how to get the programming working.
Endless-sphere.com • View topic - connections for? EcityP Smart S5-13 BMS
Endless-sphere.com • View topic - O2Micro OZ890 Based BMS Units
According to the first thread, if you disconnect the P+ wire with the multipin connected, it damages the balancing ability, but I don't know if that's certain