It looks like cell no 5 is at least 0.35V lower than all the other cells, and is causing your
BMS to cut the power from the battery to prevent it from being further discharged.
I suggest that you fully charge the battery and then measure the cells again to check that they are
all fully charged.
If cell 5 is at the same voltage as the others after the initial charge, I would say the cell is faulty and will need to be replaced.
However, if cell 5 is still substantially lower than the others after a full charge, I would leave the battery on charge for a few more hours to see if it improves.
If it does improve
(but not 100%) leave it charging to see if the
BMS can balance the cells to allow the low cell to reach the same voltage as all the other cells. If it is just an out of balance cell, it could take a long time to fully charge.
To prevent the other 15
(already fully charged) cells from being overcharged, the
BMS uses resistors to bleed off any excess voltage. But as this discharge is usually only around 200mA, it usually limits the charging current to a similar level
(or cycles it on and off) during the balancing phase at the end of the initial charging process.
If cell 5 is unable to reach the same voltage as the other cells, it is probably a faulty cell
(although it is also possible that a faulty BMS could also prevent it from being correctly balanced).
Measuring the cells one by one is generally more accurate as they can all be measured on the same lower scale setting on your multimeter
(e.g. 0-20VDC) which gives a higher precision reading
(2 decimal places).
Using the 0-200VDC scale is generally a much lower precision readout to just 1 decimal place, which is not really accurate enough for cell voltages.
Your results from measuring the cells the way Ping suggested illustrates this nicely:
Pin 1: 3.25v 3.25V
Pin 2: 6.53 - 6.54v (fluctuates) 3.28V
Pin 3: 9.81v 3.28V
Pin 4: 13.09v 3.28V
Pin 5: 16.03v 2.94V
Pin 6: 19.30v 3.27VPin 7: 22.5v 3.2V
Pin 8: 25.8v 3.3V
Pin 9: 29.1v 3.3V
Pin 10: 32.3v 3.2V
Pin 11: 35.6v 3.3V
Pin: 12: 38.9v 3.3V
Pin: 13: 42.2v 3.3V
Pin: 14: 45.4v 3.2V
Pin: 15: 48.7v 3.3V
Pin: 16: 52.0v 3.3VThe results in green are rounded to the nearest tenth of a Volt whereas the results in blue are within one hundredth of a Volt.
At least you now know why the battery was cutting out
(the BMS main power cut-off being triggered by the low cell voltage).
Alan