But what is the normal temperature of my charging battery? I bought this in the Great AliExpress Winter Sale of 2023/24, which will long be remembered as one of the good ones:
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...which will be switching this 12V bike horn on at 30°C or thereabouts:
...via a 12V wall wart, because I bought the 110V-220V version of the STC-1000. Back to the question... I had tried measuring battery case surface temperature a couple of months ago using the thermocouple on my Neoteck DVM, but could't detect any temperature change while my battery was charging. IIRC
@Sturmey suggested on another thread, that I should use a thermal insulator, so I went with a small block of polystyrene foam; carved a little groove for the STC-1000's heat probe.
Ambient air temperature:
Heat insulated probe - I pushed it a bit to the right before...
...securing the probe to the charging battery, mid way along the top because heat rises, while the battery is switched off as per instructions supplied with my battery, held on with a velcro strap. Temperature rose a little straighaway, despite the charger not having been switched on. Temperature lowered to this after 10 minutes:
Here's how temperature changed with time, in minutes, charging while battery was turned off - I couldn't watch the thing like a hawk, because I was running about doing other things at the same time, hence the irregular time intervals between readings.
Highest temperature was 24.6°C - so when are the bleeding resitors supposed to start bleeding to balance charge? The charger's light was still showing red at the hottest point, and for quite a long time afterwards. I decided to turn the charger off after the charger light turned green because temperature kept falling... then I turn the battery on, turn the charger back on and resume charging hoping to see indication of a balance charge. Here's what happened when:
The voltage after charging with the battery off, was 41.98V/41.99V - I doubted there was going to be any balancing, because temperature kept falling. With the battery turned on and charging, temerature stabilisd at 22.7°C, presumably held there by the bleeding bleed resistors bleeding bleeding heat into the battery case. After an hour of balance charging, the temperature remained 22.7°C...
... and the battery measured 42.05V/42.06V, with my
reasonably accurate ANENG AN8008 DVM skipping between the two values. This is higher voltage than usual, and for the past three years I have been mostly charging my battery while switched off, because that's what it says on the instruction leaflet. On the odd occasion after I had acidentally done an actual balance charge with the battery switched on, when I thought it was off, my bike felt slightly more powerful, so the "is it balancing?" question has been irritating me - I can't get my fingers in between the plates of the BMS to feel the temperature of the bleeding bleed resistors, and I don't have a thermal camera to see if balancing is happening. The heatsink is riveted onto the BMS.
...therefore it's a jolly good thing I did this test! Voltage after 30 minutes was 42.04V, and 42.02V after 90 minutes, compared to a couple of months ago when I did a "balance charge" with the battery switched off: back then 'twas 41.7V after 30 minutes, and still 41.7V after 90 minutes. On the bright side, perhaps my BMS will last longer than it would have, because clearly, I haven't been using it's balancing functions much. I can't be bothered to check cell bank voltages just now.
After over 3 years and 4,000km+, this battery with LG MH1 cells which I ordered with my BBS01B kit from IEBIKE on Amazon marketplace was a good purchase, I think. But supplied with wrong charging instructions!!!!
I think it's safe to assume a battery charging temperature of 30°C in winter justifies my Roger Moore impression shortly before Jaws bites him: one eyebrow raised in alarm, at the very least.
Time to discharge my battery, using my 7800LM headlights...
EDIT: It's taken my lights about 4.5 hours to discharge the battery to 39V.