Hi Graydon and
to the forum.
The Shark batteries use 18650 cylindrical cells:
These cells are LiIon
(not LiFePO4) and therefore have a nominal voltage of 3.6/3.7V. The maximum charging voltage is typically 4.2V per cell and permanent damage can occur if they are discharged below 2.5V per cell.
Your 52V batteries each have 14 paralleled cell groups connected in series, therefore the 52V comes from 14S x 3.7V
(Number of cells in series multiplied by the nominal voltage of each cell) which is actually 51.8V, but this figure is typically rounded up to 52V for simplicity. Similarly, a 48V 18650 LiIon pack is actually 48.1V (13S x 3.7V) and a 52V LiFePO
4 is actually 51.2V (16S x 3.2V).
52V batteries are not actually 52V. They are 50.4V as they use 14 series of 3.6V nominal cells (14*3.6V = 50.4V).
Unless you are connecting wirelessly to the battery's
BMS using an App, the voltage shown on a wired display would probably be calculated from the battery voltage feeding the display unit itself, and from the readings you have mentioned, your display is either reading slightly high, or your charger is outputting too much voltage, as the charging voltage should
never exceed 58.8V for a 14S LiMn pack.
The battery's
BMS should cut the power when the total pack voltage
(or an individual cell group's voltage) reaches the preset low limit to protect the cells from permanent damage.
I prefer not to let my cells go below a resting voltage of ~3.5V
(i.e. 49V for your packs) however, under heavy load the voltage will typically drop much lower than this without activating the
BMS's low voltage cutoff.
I have no experience with the Photon mid drive kits, so I don't know whether their controllers also incorporate any automatic current reduction or cut off function when set low voltages are reached, but the Shark battery should definitely have it's own protection provided by it's built in
BMS.
Unfortunately, I don't know what the shutdown voltage of the Shark battery is, but I'm sure you'll find out if it ever gets that low.
I've not seen the Shark
BMS's Bluetooth App, so I don't know whether it might allow the Cutoff voltage to be customised to suit your preferences.
Alan