jonyjoe303
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Below is some pictures of the small ones I made. The largest I made was a 220ah lifepo4 battery from 160x 32650 cells. Pound for pound the 18650 cells are the best for any project, they take up less space then the 26650 lifepo4.
The 9 ah lifepo4(26650) pack takes up the same space as the 27 ah li-ion(18650) pack. If I had used better 18650 cells (higher mah) I could have reached 40 ah instead of 27 ah, 40 ah is the same as a 700 dollar goal zero 400. The lifepo4 pack I'm building as a jump pack to jumpstart my van, those cells are rated 50 amp discharge, laptop cells max out at 2 amp discharge.
On ebay you can find under "lot of 18650" I only buy the ones that have been tested and have the mah on the side of the cells, I have good luck with those. Also people sell on craiglist laptop batteries, but you have to take apart and test. To test the cells you need an opus btc3100, it can test 4 cells at a time. For high discharge you need powertool 18650 or high drain 26650 lifepo4. They sell the spacers (to assemble the packs) on ebay. You can find BMS also on ebay as low as 4 dollars for 30 amps ones.
For laptop cells I would stick with 3s, its all I ever use, I never had inverters shutoff on me from low voltage. They run everything I ran on a 12 volt lead acid battery.
For building lithium packs, I highly recommend a tab welder. I use the malectrics model (cost about 100 dollars) that runs off a 12 volt lead acid battery, I can build inside my van. Some people use solder irons to put together. Tab welder is alot quicker especially if you have hundreds of cells.
You can build a small 3s lithium pack to learn the basics on putting together and wiring up a bms, then move on to much larger packs. There is website "repackr", that will tell you where to place all the cells in your pack so it can stay in balance.
You can also build using the larger square prismatic lifepo4. You only need 4 of those large cells to get 100ah, but they are more expensive.
The 9 ah lifepo4(26650) pack takes up the same space as the 27 ah li-ion(18650) pack. If I had used better 18650 cells (higher mah) I could have reached 40 ah instead of 27 ah, 40 ah is the same as a 700 dollar goal zero 400. The lifepo4 pack I'm building as a jump pack to jumpstart my van, those cells are rated 50 amp discharge, laptop cells max out at 2 amp discharge.
On ebay you can find under "lot of 18650" I only buy the ones that have been tested and have the mah on the side of the cells, I have good luck with those. Also people sell on craiglist laptop batteries, but you have to take apart and test. To test the cells you need an opus btc3100, it can test 4 cells at a time. For high discharge you need powertool 18650 or high drain 26650 lifepo4. They sell the spacers (to assemble the packs) on ebay. You can find BMS also on ebay as low as 4 dollars for 30 amps ones.
For laptop cells I would stick with 3s, its all I ever use, I never had inverters shutoff on me from low voltage. They run everything I ran on a 12 volt lead acid battery.
For building lithium packs, I highly recommend a tab welder. I use the malectrics model (cost about 100 dollars) that runs off a 12 volt lead acid battery, I can build inside my van. Some people use solder irons to put together. Tab welder is alot quicker especially if you have hundreds of cells.
You can build a small 3s lithium pack to learn the basics on putting together and wiring up a bms, then move on to much larger packs. There is website "repackr", that will tell you where to place all the cells in your pack so it can stay in balance.
You can also build using the larger square prismatic lifepo4. You only need 4 of those large cells to get 100ah, but they are more expensive.