Ok so I've researched battery technology a lot but would like a few more opinions.
I will shortly be needing a battery for my Brompton conversion project (although I have a 36v pack from my Juicy Sport to test and get it up and running).
I need a fairly high capacity so I'm looking at the Ezee 14Ah (3.9kg), Cellman 12S5P (5kg, 11.5Ah), or Crystalyte high power 16Ah (3.6kg).
Can anybody tell me the advantage of going for the heavier A123 Cellman Lifepo4 battery? As far as I can work out I would get a slightly higer (39.6) voltage, a longer life cycle (potentially but no guarantee) and a battery that will hold the voltage for longer during the discharge cycle. However, this seems to be balanced against the fact that it is heavier and in fact lower capacity (the 14Ah cellman is 6kg).
The Ezee battery comes in a nice hard case and has a 2 year warranty...seems to be a winner for me but there must be something about Cellmans (emmissions-free) batteries as they have amazing reviews. Am I missing some other huge advantage of Lifepo4?
I will shortly be needing a battery for my Brompton conversion project (although I have a 36v pack from my Juicy Sport to test and get it up and running).
I need a fairly high capacity so I'm looking at the Ezee 14Ah (3.9kg), Cellman 12S5P (5kg, 11.5Ah), or Crystalyte high power 16Ah (3.6kg).
Can anybody tell me the advantage of going for the heavier A123 Cellman Lifepo4 battery? As far as I can work out I would get a slightly higer (39.6) voltage, a longer life cycle (potentially but no guarantee) and a battery that will hold the voltage for longer during the discharge cycle. However, this seems to be balanced against the fact that it is heavier and in fact lower capacity (the 14Ah cellman is 6kg).
The Ezee battery comes in a nice hard case and has a 2 year warranty...seems to be a winner for me but there must be something about Cellmans (emmissions-free) batteries as they have amazing reviews. Am I missing some other huge advantage of Lifepo4?