I've got some time today and actually finished testing the light green, Panasonic CGR18650CG cells. The reason that makes it so quick, is not a good one. Here it is:
Cell # | Discharge (mAh) | Charge (mAh) | IR (mOhm) |
1 | 560 | 682 | 182 |
2 | 696 | 631 | 161 |
3 | 881 | 801 | 147 |
4 | 744 | 777 | 164 |
5 | 760 | 631 | 190 |
6 | 455 | 593 | 120 |
These should be 2250mAh cells. Out of factory IR should be around 65 mOhm.
They charge and discharge in prob half the time of my dark green ones.
They're in bad shape, but usable for testing. I think I'll do 1,5,6 and 2,3,4 parallel groups.
Now I also had time to do the purple cells - in which I am at loss of words.
They drop to 3V immediately on 1.2A load, then goes to 2.5V in seconds. I had to drop the cutoff voltage to 2V to even test them properly. Even then, they only register 60-90mAh. I tried overcharging them to 4.3V (who knows? they might be those rare cells), which charges them for an additional 5 or 10 mAh.
Not to mention one of them gets quite hot on discharge - a red flag.
So right now, I can do 5S3P with one questionable parallel group, or 6S2P with risk of drawing peak load of almost 4A across all cells.
Thoughts? I might be able to do both...
My prediction is at first load, 5S3P will drop to 17.2V (3 + 2 * 3.3 + 2 * 3.8) immediately, then to 16V in 5 mins. Then in another min or so either it's dead or the dynamo can cope that low (why didn't I ask its absolute lower boundary to Larry?).
With 6S2P, it'll go well, but nothing should crank it up above 110W mark or I risk overheating them cells. A youtube test might work..
The only decision I made is, this time around I won't be using a bms since it'll likely only worsen the pack condition because it is mismatched from the start.