Hailong Samsung 18650 battery packs:
The first battery packs I looked at were Hailong, in a hard case (meant to fit to the bottle cage mounts on a down tube) that use Samsung 18650 batteries. These packs are expensive - presumably because they have Samsung cells? A 48V 17.5Ah battery from Junstar on Amazon in the UK, currently costs about £400. Since that is a huge sum of money, I started looking at other options...
LiitoKala 21700 battery packs:
These battery packs aren't in a hard case, they are shrink wrapped and don't have an on/off switch. They just have 2 wires coming out, one to power the motor and one to charge it. The advantage to these packs is, they are more compact, because they use 21700 cells - for example you can get a 48V 25Ah pack that is only 28.5cm x 11cm x 7.5cm. This is an overall volume of 2.35 litres. Compare that to the size of a Hailong 47V 17.5Ah pack that's 36.7cm x 9.0cm x 11.1cm - a total volume of 3.67 liters.
That's a big difference in size and price!
Direct comparison:
Hailong 48V 17.5Ah (Amazon UK) Junstar:
- Price: £404.87
- Capacity: 17.5Ah
- Size: 36.7cm x 9.0cm x 11.1cm
- Volume: 3.67 liters
- Weight: 4.1 KG
- Battery type: Samsung 18650
LiitoKala 48V 25Ah (AliExpress) liitokala Official Store:
- Price with shipping and VAT added: £222.94
- Capacity: 25Ah
- Size: 28.5cm x 11cm x 7.5cm
- Volume: 2.35 liters
- Weight: 5 KG
- Battery type: Unbranded 21700
The Hailong starts to look like a silly option?
The Hailong is 82% more expensive.
The LiitoKala has 43% more capacity.
The Hailong is 56% bigger by volume.
So, why is this? Are we just paying for the brand name with Samsung?
The Hailong hard case isn't an expensive addon, nor is the base plate it plugs into (about £30) so it's not that.
If you don't care about mounting the battery on your down tube, what reason could there possibly be to buy the Hailong/Samsung battery?
The first battery packs I looked at were Hailong, in a hard case (meant to fit to the bottle cage mounts on a down tube) that use Samsung 18650 batteries. These packs are expensive - presumably because they have Samsung cells? A 48V 17.5Ah battery from Junstar on Amazon in the UK, currently costs about £400. Since that is a huge sum of money, I started looking at other options...
LiitoKala 21700 battery packs:
These battery packs aren't in a hard case, they are shrink wrapped and don't have an on/off switch. They just have 2 wires coming out, one to power the motor and one to charge it. The advantage to these packs is, they are more compact, because they use 21700 cells - for example you can get a 48V 25Ah pack that is only 28.5cm x 11cm x 7.5cm. This is an overall volume of 2.35 litres. Compare that to the size of a Hailong 47V 17.5Ah pack that's 36.7cm x 9.0cm x 11.1cm - a total volume of 3.67 liters.
That's a big difference in size and price!
Direct comparison:
Hailong 48V 17.5Ah (Amazon UK) Junstar:
- Price: £404.87
- Capacity: 17.5Ah
- Size: 36.7cm x 9.0cm x 11.1cm
- Volume: 3.67 liters
- Weight: 4.1 KG
- Battery type: Samsung 18650
LiitoKala 48V 25Ah (AliExpress) liitokala Official Store:
- Price with shipping and VAT added: £222.94
- Capacity: 25Ah
- Size: 28.5cm x 11cm x 7.5cm
- Volume: 2.35 liters
- Weight: 5 KG
- Battery type: Unbranded 21700
The Hailong starts to look like a silly option?
The Hailong is 82% more expensive.
The LiitoKala has 43% more capacity.
The Hailong is 56% bigger by volume.
So, why is this? Are we just paying for the brand name with Samsung?
The Hailong hard case isn't an expensive addon, nor is the base plate it plugs into (about £30) so it's not that.
If you don't care about mounting the battery on your down tube, what reason could there possibly be to buy the Hailong/Samsung battery?