Ok as promised this is my thread on a £20 DIY ebike battery.
I have been thinking about making one of these for a while. Just to remind you of my current DIY battery setup, see details here
My current battery is based around A123, 3.3v, 2.3Ah cells. Its a 12s1p pack made up of two packs of 6s1p connected in series which provides me with 36v, 2.3Ah of power. The pack is over two years old, has 3300 miles on it with some 700 charge cycles. I did abuse it a little and had to change two cells a few months ago but its been fine since then. This packs costs about £80 to make.
A123 also do some lower capacity batteries 3.3v 1.1Ah. The prompt to try these was when I received one of the new small/mini controllers. I thought hey, I could put all this in a very small package on one of my light portable setups. Post to follow.
I did some tests on my commute and confirmed my outbound commute could be reduced to 400-600mAh if I used more physical effort. My return commute is even better using only 300mAh. My commute is a 12.5 miles round trip and the batteries can be charged at work before I return the 5.25 miles home.
Ok here are the two pack types. As I said I buy them pre made up, glued together with the associated connector strips spot welded to the battery terminals.
The original 6s1p pack using 3.3v, 2.3Ah cells
The new 6s1p pack using 3.3v 1.1Ah cells. Note for a 12s1p pack you need two of these.
Physically they are half the size and half the weight. Here is the first 6s1p with balance taps and power leads.
All the details of how to do this are in my DIY battery build link above. Finally the completed battery shown next to its bigger brother. A sort of mini-me of the orignal.
Note there is a 15amp car blade fuse fittted in the circuit for safety.
Top original battery weighs around 1kg and new mini-me one weighs 0.5kg.
Regards
Jerry
I have been thinking about making one of these for a while. Just to remind you of my current DIY battery setup, see details here
My current battery is based around A123, 3.3v, 2.3Ah cells. Its a 12s1p pack made up of two packs of 6s1p connected in series which provides me with 36v, 2.3Ah of power. The pack is over two years old, has 3300 miles on it with some 700 charge cycles. I did abuse it a little and had to change two cells a few months ago but its been fine since then. This packs costs about £80 to make.
A123 also do some lower capacity batteries 3.3v 1.1Ah. The prompt to try these was when I received one of the new small/mini controllers. I thought hey, I could put all this in a very small package on one of my light portable setups. Post to follow.
I did some tests on my commute and confirmed my outbound commute could be reduced to 400-600mAh if I used more physical effort. My return commute is even better using only 300mAh. My commute is a 12.5 miles round trip and the batteries can be charged at work before I return the 5.25 miles home.
Ok here are the two pack types. As I said I buy them pre made up, glued together with the associated connector strips spot welded to the battery terminals.
The original 6s1p pack using 3.3v, 2.3Ah cells
The new 6s1p pack using 3.3v 1.1Ah cells. Note for a 12s1p pack you need two of these.
Physically they are half the size and half the weight. Here is the first 6s1p with balance taps and power leads.
All the details of how to do this are in my DIY battery build link above. Finally the completed battery shown next to its bigger brother. A sort of mini-me of the orignal.
Note there is a 15amp car blade fuse fittted in the circuit for safety.
Top original battery weighs around 1kg and new mini-me one weighs 0.5kg.
Regards
Jerry
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