Comment by hnuser123456

Comment by hnuser123456 3 days ago

2 replies

For a highly engineered battery like a premium EV, there are coolant channels, temp monitoring, voltage monitoring, etc.

Soldering some connectors onto some random cells and knowing they shouldn't go over 4.2v is one thing, but measuring cell health via internal resistance, programming a controller to do temp shutoff and wiring up temp sensors, keeping cells balanced, is a lot of extra work, but critical if you at all care about not potentially burning down wherever they're stored.

Keeping the cells small and just using a hundred of them in parallel (and a hundred of these parallel packs in series to get up to the hundreds of volts needed), thus using ~10,000 cells, in EV batteries limits the maximum damage from one cell going worst-case, assuming your enclosure can contain it.

That being said, it seems there is a slow movement towards larger cells, from 18650 to 26650 or similar. But each cell on its own is still a dumb can of chemicals ready to go boom if you mistreat it.

bmicraft 3 days ago

There are some pretty huge cells now like the 4680s

  • genewitch 3 days ago

    And really tiny ones, 10400, which is AAA sized.

    Don't, uh, buy those unless you're sure.