CEF50 External battery build

mike_kelly

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The main weight would be below in it the frame. This is extender not main battery and it is small.
 

un..inc

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Jun 13, 2023
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Germany
1705477169839.png


I mean, Canyon puts it's waterbottle there... :D
 


Freda

Member
Feb 5, 2023
97
92
Vaasa
batteryplan.png


So planning a range extender for my LCE930. Is there any reason this would not work?

Charging connectors could be different but need to be 4pin minimum and handle 20A. Easier would be to use the battery balancer, but then I would need a second port to connect the range extender.
 

mike_kelly

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View attachment 135986

So planning a range extender for my LCE930. Is there any reason this would not work?

Charging connectors could be different but need to be 4pin minimum and handle 20A. Easier would be to use the battery balancer, but then I would need a second port to connect the range extender.
Looks good to me.
 

mike_kelly

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Aug 11, 2022
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You have to stop each battery from discharging into the other.
 

Myalteregohamish

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Jan 4, 2023
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Vancouver, WA
The ideal diodes make sure the back flow of power doesn’t take place into from the lower capacity battery. Assuming they’re both at 100%. Then you just converge them with a Y connector. So the gauge on the display. Initially comes down from 100% to around 70ish percent which is when both batteries seem to start discharging and then discharge slows down all the way to the bottom.
 

mike_kelly

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Isn’t possible ti have the extender discharging into the main battery directly ?
That is quite dangerous. If you rode say 20 miles on your main battery and then added a fresh external battery during the ride there is a good chance you could destroy your bike. The internal battery will be discharged because you used it up, and the voltage will be low. The external battery is fully charged so the voltage is high. Current flows from a higher voltage source to a lower voltage source. If the difference between the lower voltage and higher voltage is a lot, then the current will be high. This high current may be higher than the battery is designed for, the "C" rating. (the size of the internal wires etc) Then it is a good chance that the wires will overheat then damage the batteries. Hence flames and melted plastic.
That is why you need two ideal diodes to prevent the two current sources from flowing into each other.
There are other ways of doing this. The little switch boxes available turn off one battery or the other depending on which one is at a higher voltage. It lets the higher voltage battery be used until it is the same voltage as the lower. It will then monitor and it one drops faster than the other it will shut it off. It always lets the higher voltage battery be used until it equals the lower.
 
Last edited:

Freda

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Feb 5, 2023
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Vaasa
One concern I have is if I empty the main battery and then connect fully charged range extender. Then I would be feeding over 50V from extender and less then 40V from main battery at the same time. How does the motor react to this?
 

Freda

Member
Feb 5, 2023
97
92
Vaasa
But it would be so nice to build with these cells, INR21700-M58T, around 530Wh(2 kg) main battery and 260Wh(<1kg) extender.
Since my 720Wh battery I run now is too much in most cases. I run out before the battery does.. And removing almost one kilogram from the front of the bike would definitely be noticeable.
 

brbr

Active member
Dec 28, 2022
463
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France
That is quite dangerous. If you rode say 20 miles on your main battery and then added a fresh external battery during the ride there is a good chance you could destroy your bike. Current flows from a higher voltage source to a lower voltage source. If the difference between the lower voltage and higher voltage is a lot, then the current will be high. This high current may be higher than the battery is designed for, the "C" rating. Then it is a good chance that the wires will overheat then damage the batteries. Hence flames and melted plastic.
That is why you need two ideal diodes to prevent the two current sources from flowing into each other.
There are other ways of doing this. The little swtich boxes available turn off one battery or the other depending on which one is at a higher voltage.
Thanks! That’s clear now
 

mike_kelly

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Aug 11, 2022
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One concern I have is if I empty the main battery and then connect fully charged range extender. Then I would be feeding over 50V from extender and less then 40V from main battery at the same time. How does the motor react to this?
The higher voltage battery will supply more current to the motor than the 40v battery. But they will both supply given that you have ideal diodes that stop the 50v from charging the 40v.
 

mike_kelly

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As long as the batteries stay in range. You, of course, would not want a 50v and a 39v battery. They both need to be designed for the same motor voltage.

I suppose there is the question running internal down to cutoff, then adding external. The computer only knows about one virtual battery, it sees the new fully charged external and continues to allow full power. The essentially empty internal is not "cutoff" or throttled down. Will it damage the internal once the external also begins to get exhausted but not enough to kick in the limiter. Without ideal diodes they would equalize and act as one battery. But with ideal diodes to prevent that.... I am not sure what happens.
With the switch controller it switches out the low voltage battery and lets the new battery take all the load. The trouble with the switches is that they are big and hard to fit in the frame and two they don't handle charging so you have to have separate lines to charge independently and the charge lines to the battery can't be connected to the output of the battery.
 

Myalteregohamish

Active member
Jan 4, 2023
294
228
Vancouver, WA
As long as the batteries stay in range. You, of course, would not want a 50v and a 39v battery. They both need to be designed for the same motor voltage.

I suppose there is the question running internal down to cutoff, then adding external. The computer only knows about one virtual battery, it sees the new fully charged external and continues to allow full power. The essentially empty internal is not "cutoff" or throttled down. Will it damage the internal once the external also begins to get exhausted but not enough to kick in the limiter. Without ideal diodes they would equalize and act as one battery. But with ideal diodes to prevent that.... I am not sure what happens.
With the switch controller it switches out the low voltage battery and lets the new battery take all the load. The trouble with the switches is that they are big and hard to fit in the frame and two they don't handle charging so you have to have separate lines to charge independently and the charge lines to the battery can't be connected to the output of the battery.
Great explanation of the pros and cons. Thank you sir.
 

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