Thanks for the input
@saneagle - I incorrectly said '
measured at the BMS' - I actually measured the voltage at the ends of the cell pack at the points marked 'X' in the last picture above.
Anyway, since then I've managed to probe through the mastic blobs (heck, that stuff really bonds and is tiresome to remove!) and measuring from the +Ve end of the pack, recorded the following cell voltages:
1. 4.08v
2. 4.08v
3. 4.08v
4. 4.08v
5. 3.08v
6. to 10. a few millivolts, so in practice, zero volts
In terms of researching (internet trawling) the resuscitation of those last 5 cells, opinion varies as to whether it can be done and even if it can, how good will the recovered cells be with respect to the first five?
Of all that I read last night I felt the most informed and practical advice came from a YT poster called
Bigclive whose posts I used to read extensively, and in his discussion of recovering deep discharged cells (
LINK) he thinks it is possible in the 'use case' he had before him, and in the YT video notes gives a link to an in depth paper (
LINK2) that helped him to come to this conclusion.
However, the stresses and strains on an ebike battery are somewhat different to what he had on his bench and given that 5 of the cells (in this Swytch battery)are zero volts and five are not, makes me wonder as to 'repairability' of it all i.e. is there a BMS problem?
I am going to advise my friend to recycle (as in bin it) the battery - if it where my pack and the BMS was ok and I replaced/recovered the 5 zero volt cells, I'd never trust the battery to give me a decent power output and would always be wondering about future issues.
What do you guys think?