Well, that's certainly made me think again! Was yours definitely from the same seller as the one used by the OP and others in this thread?
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I don't know about Cycle Analyst, but the other watt-meters that use shunts to measure the amp-hours are not very accurate.I've had only 6aH from a 10aH battery on one watt-meter and 9 on another for the same battery. Normally, you need to calibrate them. So be careful about drawing conclusions. Just because it says a number on an LCD display, doesn't mean it's right. If I understand it right and you use the CA plugged in to your controller, there's a necessary calibration procedure. The watt-meters that use hall snsors to measure the current are supposed to be more accurate.I bought one of the Duct tape wrapped packed (CammyCC, Volgood.. he uses a few names) and was happy with it until I got a Cycle Analyst- the 20Ah pack was only giving out 12Ah.
I wouldn't have known without the means to measure the Ah used in discharging that the CA gives.
I had a message conversation with MalcolmW and then we spoke on the phone and he hasn`t had any problems using the battery I originally suggested ( I think that was maybe two months ago) I`m sure he would have phoned me back if he had any problems.Oh well, in view of the balance of negative comments versus positive on these batteries, I guess it will be back to Plan A and a Ping battery!
That's why I think I will stick to my original intention to go for one from Ping, as I have heard no bad things about his, even though (perhaps because) they are more expensive.So! the rule of thumb re: you get what you pay for: still in general holds hard and fast but I`m afraid I have discovered that depending on what the item is and what demands you are going to put on it (like maybe a safety harness for mountain climbingin these times of tight cash and an expanding 3rd world then there are some bargains to be had for sure.
Sorry- slight inaccuracy in the above- they were my initial measurements before I had finished the checking, I looked at my initial notes for those figures. The end battery groups voltages aren't monitored through the ribbon cables, and there are actually 12 groups of batteries in the way the pack is organised. The end by the no-voltage groups also had no voltage, others were ok, so bad groups are 4/12. This means 4/12 * 20Ah are available from the pack when new which is 13.3Ah. In relation to my earlier figures it just means the pack is a bit more age-worn than was suggested- it is over 2 years old now so no surprise.Measuring the voltages fed to the Battery Management system showed that there were a number of dead groups (3 out of 8) in the pack giving no voltage-
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Added to the above- I found out that 4 channels of the BMS are not functioning correctly so before I start messing with that spaghetti type busbar mess (there's nearly 10 metres of the stuff used on the battery) I need a new BMS, so it's ordered- a proper one not a Cammy one. Once I've got that I'll recharge the pack, try a run to exhaustion (battery exhaustion- I'm already exhausted with the thing) to remeasure capacity and see if a bad BMS has added to the capacity issue.That makes my lipo setup look like a piece of **** to work with.
I hope you sort it out but that many cells and splitting out looks a nightmare.
Good luck!