1. Your 302A CATL cells are LiFePO
4, and these cells typically have a maximum charging voltage of 3.65V per cell -
Not 4 to 4.2V.
Q: What is the balance function?
Do we need cell balance or not?
A: The working principle and function are as followings:
When your one cell voltage was reached balance voltage(Li-ion 4.18V, LifePo4 3.6V), that cell balance start work, balance resistance starts discharge with 35mA, that cell was in both charging and discharging status, and other cells were not reached balance voltage(Li-ion 4.18V, Life Po43.6V), so they are only in charging status, when the fast cell voltage was reached overcharge voltage (Li-ion 4.25V, Life Po4 3.75V),BMS starts off power protection, all the cells are stop charging, this process will enable your battery charging in balance current, and your battery voltage are in balance status.
However, if your cell voltage difference are in a big range, The equilibrium effect is almost zero,The solution is to replace cells with large voltage gaps.
I suspect that your
BMS is either faulty, or it's the wrong type for your battery
(it appears to be set for Li-Ion or LiPo instead of LiFePO4), which is probably why the
SOC gauge reads 0% instead of 100% with an average cell voltage of 3.481V:
Are you using the correct 58.4V charger?Did you fully balance all 16 cells to the exact same resting voltage before assembling the battery pack?Even with the correct
BMS working 100% properly, if your cells were imbalanced by just 1% and left on charge continually to allow the cells to balance, it would take more than 3 days and 13 hours for the
BMS to fully balance the cells correctly with just a 35mA drain on the high cells.
As your lowest cell appears to be at ~80% capacity
(~240Ah), I suspect you would need to leave it on charge for
over 10 weeks for a correct and 100% working
BMS to fully balance your pack with a constant current of just 35mA.
I think your
BMS needs to be replaced with either the correct type or a non-faulty one.
If you definitely purchased the correct 16S LiFePO4
BMS, then you should contact your
BMS supplier and explain the problem to them.
The correct
BMS should not allow any cell voltage to exceed 3.75V, as it should disconnect the charging current immediately if any cell reached this voltage.
I strongly recommend that you manually balance the cells by discharging the higher cells down to the
resting voltage of the lowest cell.
If you don't have a suitable RC charger for discharging single cells
(or multiple cells with a suitable balance lead setup) you can use a 12V 60W headlamp bulb to discharge individual cells at ~2.5A @ 3.4V.
If you're discharging cells using the bulb technique, you must check the
resting voltage of the cell after the bulb has been disconnected for a few minutes, as the cell voltage will typically rise when the bulb is initially disconnected.
2. I am not familiar with the operation of the Daly
BMS Bluetooth App but I suspect the incorrectly shown charge/discharge current could be due to a faulty
BMS unit.
From the screenshot, it would appear that the Charging and Discharging MOSFETs are both turned On, but the Balance appears to be turned Off.
Are you able to manually turn these On and Off via the App?
Alan