edit: nice, i didn't see your last post when i first read this. Yeah, definitely, i'm stoked to try and wire the batteries myself. I'm really concerned about the weight, especially with the current size of the engine. Yeah, I know the housing will take up some weight but i still think it'll be a better solution than buying the Nissan leaf batteries. Thanks for digging around, I'm feeling a lot better about where i'm at at least with the battery portion of the build.
edit2: ok i see where your going with this. 3200 mah/47 grams = 68 mah per gram. 80000 wh at 3.6 volts is 22,222 ah / .068amps = 326794 grams or 326 kilos. haha, nice! somewhere above i was like 1200 lbs or something, this makes me feel a lot better!
The other thing i'm thinking about is volume. 18650 is 18 mm by 65mm. With housing, if thats 20x70, even 5k batteries is 1 meter by 3.5 meters. that's like the size of a large coffin. haha, yikes!
Another thing i wanted to calculate was mileage on the flat with Air resistance. I want 200 miles range more than i have a strict battery size. i found air density times the drag coefficient times area all over two, and then multiply by velocity squared is
((at 4000 feet) .8194 X (typical suv drag) .4 x (height(8.3) x width(7.5) x .85))/2)x(80feetpersec^2)
*this is too much work* and i don't know if i'm in newtons per second or just...whatever
you said 20-30kw on air resistance earlier. if it's on the flat that's the only force acting so at 25kw and 4.2 volts thats 5952 amps so if i had 5952 batteries at 3.2 amps each i could drive for 3.2 hours at 55mph so 160 or so miles?
Just to confirm, 3.1 amps for a 84 cell module wouldn't be .04 amps per cell because their run in a series. The triple the c rating just means i have to run the engine at a third of it's max most of the time. I feel like if that's the case i should still play it safe and get the grid design holders instead of the honeycomb and also get the recommended heat shrink and insulators? Let me know if you think any of this is unnecessary.
By the way, thanks for helping with all of this. It'll be cool if this ever comes to fruition. I'll be sure to take a lot of pictures.
panasonic 18650 batteries:
grid plastic:
honeycomb plastic:
heat shrink:
insulator cardboard:
more expensive insulators: