D
If they are in an adequate enclosure, sanely wired and correctly charged/discharged - yes as safe. I have seen a leaking Lead Acid eat through its support and fall to the ground (Italian car...) I have seen one boil on charge and spit acid all over an engine bay... Nowadays we have gel Lead Acid which eliminates many of those problems.I'm sure you are right, but keeping it in context (and comparing apples with apples), would you say Lithium batteries are *as safe* as Lead Acid (in general)? Yes/No ;-)
I have a flat dinghy racer style jacket which I sit on when rowing. I have accidentally found myself in breaking waves twice (concentrated on fishing, not the ocean, once and cleaning my catch in a place where there is never surf - except that time...) and often row in +4 metre swells - record +6 metres, that was a lot of fun. Twice on beaching I have been rolled by surf - I was avoiding swimmers on the dinghy beach, you know, the one with the big "No Swimming" sign at the entry...Like, if rowing along a slow moving river we wouldn't generally wear buoyancy aids because: 1) We are unlikely to fall in for any reason (we don't stand up or jump around) 2) could stand on the bottom in most places and 3) we can swim. We might however wear them when rowing across a deep lake because of the depth or when sailing when there are real risks of capsize.
LOL! Yes, we have seen the picture of your hand! ;-)I've never used a fuse. The power wires or connectors vaporise instantly when there's a short.
Hmm, there are quite as few provisos there in comparison with a lead acid and in general though eh (well, two more than lead acid). ;-)If they are in an adequate enclosure, sanely wired and correctly charged/discharged - yes as safe.
I think you might find that was just condensation on very thin Italian car metal mate. <ducks> ;-)I have seen a leaking Lead Acid eat through its support and fall to the ground (Italian car...)
But charge risks aren't something you typically experience at point of use though in an electric boat are they (same with LiPo charging risks of course)? That said ... it sounds like *you* might get some regen charging with your electric outboard when surfing ...!I have seen one boil on charge and spit acid all over an engine bay...
.Nowadays we have gel Lead Acid which eliminates many of those problems.
Yup, we do that also. ;-)I have a flat dinghy racer style jacket which I sit on when rowing.
I bet (for a particular meaning of the word 'fun'). ;-)I have accidentally found myself in breaking waves twice (concentrated on fishing, not the ocean, once and cleaning my catch in a place where there is never surf - except that time...) and often row in +4 metre swells - record +6 metres, that was a lot of fun.
Don't you just love the general public. Why are there never sharks about when you want them ... ;-(Twice on beaching I have been rolled by surf - I was avoiding swimmers on the dinghy beach, you know, the one with the big "No Swimming" sign at the entry...
Neat. Observation though if I may. The gauge of the (XT90?) plugged harness wire looks smaller than that of the batteries (one especially, although it could just be thicker insulation)?Two 4S batteries in parallel with LiPo alarms:
Thanks for that.Having the balance leads connected as well in a parallel board will depend on the amps being drawn. The balance leads will get warm more then 5/6 amps each but if you have 5 /6 batteries connected then the amps are divided and the leads will be fine.
Those are XT60s and the parallel lead is stock from HobbyKing and 16 AWG. The serial ones are 12 AWG. There is less current over the parallel connections than over the serial ones if I have been following correctly? So long since I did High School Physics I'm afraid, lucky me there is always someone to correct me on here!Neat. Observation though if I may. The gauge of the (XT90?) plugged harness wire looks smaller than that of the batteries (one especially, although it could just be thicker insulation)?
;-)Those are XT60s and the parallel lead is stock from HobbyKing and 16 AWG. The serial ones are 12 AWG. There is less current over the parallel connections than over the serial ones if I have been following correctly? So long since I did High School Physics I'm afraid, lucky me there is always someone to correct me on here!
In an ideal world (with all cells identical and all wiring paths equal resistance), I'm not sure you should see anything flowing though the balance leads should you?If 15a was max draw, each set of balance leads theoretically would only see 2.5a between them.
Ok.How ever they will only need to be monitoring voltage as the least resistance for the draw will be through the main power lead/connector.
That was my thought. The more balanced everything is, (by definition) the less current will be flowing within the balance leads and (again, by definition), the voltage across each parallel link will be the same?If all six ports are used then you will need to monitor all the packs separately though being in parallel you should find that the cells will stay within 0.02- 0.03v,
If the balance leads were of the same capacity as the main output leads you would have a straight S/P pack. So, rather than 6x 4S in parallel, you would have a single 4S6P solution. Well, that's if I've understood it all correctly! ;-)though now and then you do get some errant cells with the HK packs and from time to time some may wander by 0.1v.
I guess the problem could exist then if a cell starts to go bad / weak and surrounding cells try to pick up the slack via the balance lead wiring?Correct AK, the current flow is at it's mightiest when in series.
Though if all cells are within 0.5v equalising current flow should be ok and not cause to much heat.
There's no current between parallel cells because the voltage is always the same, so you leave them permanently connected.Another tech paralleling question if I may ... I'm guessing you shouldn't really leave the balance wires connected (in parallel) when running (S4) batteries in parallel? The reason why I am thinking you shouldn't (but again could be wrong etc) is that the balance wires aren't typically 'man' enough to carry any current that could exist between cells in different packs when under load? <shrug>
If they were man enough you would just affectively be running a S/P battery?
(Without anything in the balance connector you could also have a cell monitor / alarm on each pack, rather than the battery as a whole (so greater granularity to the monitoring)?)
Cheers, T i m
'In an ideal world' I'm guessing or I'm not sure what the point of the balance leads would be? e.g. If all cells always charged and discharged equally ... ?There's no current between parallel cells because the voltage is always the same, so you leave them permanently connected.
Understood.No need for a monitor on each pack because they're all in parallel.
Understood. I've not ordered the balance board yet but did order a balance harness (JST-XH Parallel Balance Lead 4S 250mm (6xJST-XH)) but will order the board soon.There's 6 positions to connect packs on the balance board plus a position on the end, where you can fit the monitor. you can connect them up like that, charge through the end balance connector and the power leads, so for all use, the only thing you need to change is to disconnect the monitor for charging,
Understoodalthough some boards have double connectors on the end, so you could leave it on permanently; however, the monitor will eventually run down the pack because it takes power.
Qualification: 'When balance wires are interconnected'. ;-)Correction: Weak cell group if you have a weak cell it will drag all the others in the same parallel group down.
As you might! ;-)I have a weak cell in the 4S multistar pack in the photo above. It hasn't given me any trouble but I watch it. It is 0.2 V off the other cells, the RC guys say 0.3 V is too much and as they are the ones with batteries on fire I take their word for it.
Thinking again and please bear with my 'outsider' thoughts on all this (someone who has never played with LiPo or multiple packs in parallel but has been using rechargeable batteries of all sorts for over 40 years etc).I've never used a fuse. The power wires or connectors vaporise instantly when there's a short.