How reliable is this? If I put a 14s battery on here which can charge to 58.8v would that be safe? That's not a lot of leeway.
I'm going over options for building a battery, leaning towards 18650 cells with no
BMS. I'm going to use voltage alarms on each group of batteries while riding and charge them with a balance charger. Maybe. But if I go with 13s most chargers are 6s (the one I have now) but I can get an 8s charger easy enough. So either 2 packs of 6s (charged in parallel) and basically be riding little more than a 36v setup or 2 packs of 6s and one of 1s that I somehow have to charge separately or 2 packs of 7s charged in parallel? Or a 13s battery with a
BMS and save myself the trouble lol. Or get 13 chargers and use one on each if I wanted to be really goofy about it. I may just get an 8s charger, do 6s on my current charger and the other 7s on the new charger. That would be the cheapest and easiest solution. Any suggestions?
*Side note: I have read up on 18650s and how much current each type can deliver and I've bought some and done my own tests for capacity and voltage sag. Still crunching numbers to decide which way I want to go, a smaller, lighter, lower capacity (8-10Ah) battery with high current or a larger, heavier but much higher capacity (20-24Ah) battery with the same current. They would cost about the same. I only need 18A. I've had a meter on my bike for a week, the most I've drawn is 19.56A. Do I want the extra weight when I usually use 2.5-3Ah each way on my commute and can charge at work and home? Is it worth it to be able to ride 40-50kms once in a while? Decisions decisions.
This is my winter project, it's for next spring. Lots to learn yet still before deciding on a direction and spending money. For now I just want to know is that limit reliable.