Hi,
I want to connect 3 identical 6P packs' parallel strings together side-by-side to operate as a larger pack off a single BMS - 2 questions:
1/ would it be sufficient to make the nickel strip connections between packs, illustrated by red lines in the pic below, to just 4 cells out of each 6? Am I right in assuming that the current requirement would be max pack amps divided by the number of cells in each parallel group?
2/ what would be the implications of recruiting cojoined cells into a parallel group using a single cable connection rather than using nickel strips?
To clarify what I'm trying to achieve. I have 3x 10S6P li-ion packs that I want to make into 1x 10S18P pack running off a single BMS. So I have to connect the 10 parallel groups of each pack together. The problem is how to achieve that efficiently.
I was also considering (for another purpose) converting a 10S pack to a 7S, redistributing cells from the 3 disconnected strings back to the 7 active strings with cables.
Thanks in advance.
I want to connect 3 identical 6P packs' parallel strings together side-by-side to operate as a larger pack off a single BMS - 2 questions:
1/ would it be sufficient to make the nickel strip connections between packs, illustrated by red lines in the pic below, to just 4 cells out of each 6? Am I right in assuming that the current requirement would be max pack amps divided by the number of cells in each parallel group?
2/ what would be the implications of recruiting cojoined cells into a parallel group using a single cable connection rather than using nickel strips?
To clarify what I'm trying to achieve. I have 3x 10S6P li-ion packs that I want to make into 1x 10S18P pack running off a single BMS. So I have to connect the 10 parallel groups of each pack together. The problem is how to achieve that efficiently.
I was also considering (for another purpose) converting a 10S pack to a 7S, redistributing cells from the 3 disconnected strings back to the 7 active strings with cables.
Thanks in advance.