You should always follow the manufacturer's advice because they generally know what's in their products and how they work.
For anybody else in doubt about why 80% charging is not a good idea, here's an animation that shows how a typical ebike charging system works. They nearly all use what's known as "top balancing", which is what this animation shows. The exact values vary from battery to battery, but in principle, they're all the same. When any cell reaches a high level voltage, a transistor opens up a load resistor to bleed off charge while the other cells catch up. This happens until the total pack voltage is equal to the charger voltage. If you only charge to 80%, no load resistors will ever open and no balancing will happen u til your battery is completely borked.
You should always follow the manufacturer's advice because they generally know what's in their products and how they work.
For anybody else in doubt about why 80% charging is not a good idea, here's an animation that shows how a typical ebike charging system works. They nearly all use what's known as "top balancing", which is what this animation shows. The exact values vary from battery to battery, but in principle, they're all the same. When any cell reaches a high level voltage, a transistor opens up a load resistor to bleed off charge while the other cells catch up. This happens until the total pack voltage is equal to the charger voltage. If you only charge to 80%, no load resistors will ever open and no balancing will happen u til your battery is completely borked.
That animation is an extremely simplified version of cell balancing when charging only.
It does not tell you even half the story and is only true if the charger charges some cells above 4.2 volts apparently!
I apparently have GOOD chargers, and several accurate meters and both of my chargers stop at exactly 4.2 volts!
As any good 36 volt charger should.
What do you think happens then? No 42.25 volts ever!!
Your little animation film was not covering this issue at all, nor does it cover any balancing done while USING or discharging the battery either......
This what really happens:-
The balancing circuit balances the voltages on each cell, it is not set at any particular voltage that MUST be achieved.
Think of two cells and their relevant load resistors as being a pair of scales, old fashioned ones.
It does not matter if you have exactly 1 kilo on each side or 1 gram, they are
in balance.
Assuming that the scales are designed for a maximum of 1 Kilo (42 volts!).
But if one weight is HEAVIER than the other, a Robot comes cuts a bit off the heavier weight. Till balance is again achieved.
The balancing circuit will always balance to the lowest common denominator! That is the cell with the lowest voltage. But wastes power and increases heat in the battery!!
From here it shows how both types work:-
https://www.analog.com/en/technical-articles/active-battery-cell-balancing.html#
Active cell balancing is a more complex balancing technique that redistributes charge between battery cells during the charge and discharge cycles, thereby increasing system run time by increasing the total useable charge in the battery stack, decreasing charge time compared with passive balancing, and decreasing heat ...
Active Cell Balancing During Discharge - No Charger Connected!!
The diagram below represents a typical battery stack with all cells starting at full capacity. In this example, full capacity is shown as 90% of charge because keeping a battery at or near its 100% capacity point for long periods of time degrades lifetime faster.
30% represents fully discharged to prevent deep discharge of the cells. Over time, some cells will become weaker than others, resulting in a discharge profile represented by the figure below. It can be seen that even though there may be quite a bit of capacity left in several batteries, the weak batteries limit the runtime of the system.
A battery mismatch of 5% results in 5% of the capacity unused. With large batteries, this can be an excessive amount of energy left unused. This becomes critical in remote systems and systems that are difficult to access since it results in an increase in the number of battery charge and discharge cycles, which reduces the lifetime of the battery, leading to higher costs associated with more frequent battery replacement.
With active balancing, charge is redistributed from the stronger cells to the weaker cells, resulting in a fully depleted battery stack profile.
The animation does not have the circuit paths to do that!!
Furthermore, your comment here is so electronically wrong in all respects:-
This happens until the total pack voltage is equal to the charger voltage. If you only charge to 80%, no load resistors will ever open and no balancing will happen u til your battery is completely borked.
I have learned a new word!!
But none of the resistors "open or close" as you appear to believe!
Resistors are passive devices.
But the transistor can switch between "ON or OFF", either applying the resistor as a load across the cell or not! The state of the transistor is clearly marked as being on or off in the animation, not for the resistor, for the transistors, look at the animation again.
Or it can possibly switched to being a partial load, depending upon the way the control electronics are designed to work.
Which has not been mentioned at all!
If any of the load resistors were switched on, during charging as you imply, that cell would not be charged or only slightly! Depending upon the value of the resistor and the SOC of that cell!
Furthermore, apparently the animation is only of a very simple balancing system, probably not used that much today, if at all? As it simply "wastes" the power from any cell above balance voltage.
The transistor must be "OFF" for the cell to charge....
Good modern battery's electronics are far cleverer in both charge, idle and discharge mode than many think!
Please take particular notice of the sentence:- "
full capacity is shown as 90% of charge because keeping a battery at or near its 100% capacity point for long periods of time degrades lifetime faster. "
This is exactly what an average charger is doing, even when the LED has gone green!
Which is exactly what I have been trying to tell some of you here for some weeks, to no discernible effects!
But I do hope now that cell balancing has now been made far clearer for you, though I also recommend reading the whole web link I mentioned before thanking me!!!
My impression is that you are not electronically competent, sadly. A fact not a criticism, but I will still do my best to help you when I can, but never forget just how much energy is in such a battery, and "letting the smoke out" can be a disaster in many different ways!
I have only covered a simple version here, various web pages cover the actions in full detail, but it will go over the heads of some here.....so not required!
Regards
Andy