What should determine the size of charger is the parallel configuration of the battery. A battery with 5 or more cells in parallel will have a maximum charge of 800mAmps per cell which any cell likely to be used these days should be perfectly happy with. Otherwise a battery with say 10ahr capacity is likely to be made from Samsung 25R cells in a 4P - 4 parallel cells - arrangement and that handles a 4 amp charge but a 2 amp charger would be better.
For your application which must be in excess of 6P a 4 amp charger is going to take at least 5 hours and 10 hours if 2 amps. Assuming the cells are Li-Ion.
The exception to this is a non-uniform cell structure in a battery pack. A mixture of different capacities virtually dictates you use a low amperage charger because the battery management system uses very small balancing currents which won’t allow the BMS to balance charge fast enough - it chucks too much current at it.
The same applies to packs which use sub-standard cells. When a Chinese pack is offered at a very cheap price that is generally too good to be true.
The answer is build your own then you know what you’ve got but if you can’t, buy from a reputable UK supplier.
For your application which must be in excess of 6P a 4 amp charger is going to take at least 5 hours and 10 hours if 2 amps. Assuming the cells are Li-Ion.
The exception to this is a non-uniform cell structure in a battery pack. A mixture of different capacities virtually dictates you use a low amperage charger because the battery management system uses very small balancing currents which won’t allow the BMS to balance charge fast enough - it chucks too much current at it.
The same applies to packs which use sub-standard cells. When a Chinese pack is offered at a very cheap price that is generally too good to be true.
The answer is build your own then you know what you’ve got but if you can’t, buy from a reputable UK supplier.