Hi Daniel,
The description for your 36V battery is obviously not 100% correct, as it states that it comes with
48V 2A charger.
The Additional Information tab relates to the individual 5.3Ah cells used to make up the battery, but from the size and style of the cell pictured, I would say each of those 5.3Ah cells
(modules) actually contain two 2.65Ah 18650 cells side by side connected in parallel.
This means that your pack contains a total of 40 3.65V cells connected in
10S4P configuration
(or 20 modules in 10S2P configuration) to provide the total 36.5V and 10.6Ah capacity.
The fully charged voltage of this pack should therefore be 42V, and I would expect your charger to be clearly marked with this voltage.
If you measure the voltage coming from the charger's connector plug while it is disconnected from the battery, it should read ~42V with the charger plugged into the mains and turned on.
If your pack is not reaching ~42V at completion of the charge, there must be a problem with either the battery charger or the battery pack.
If the pack voltage is only 37V, this is equivalent to ~29% of its 10.6Ah capacity
(or ~3Ah), and it will not be able to properly balance the individual cells if it is not reaching the required 42V. This means that you could theoretically have a lot less than 29% capacity available at the end of a full charge.
The
Max continuous discharge rate stated is only 13A, but this appears to relate to the individual cell modules, not the actual battery pack itself.
This means that the battery should theoretically be capable of supplying 26A continuously from fully charge to completely empty,but only if the
BMS will allow it, but they do not supply any information whatsoever on the
BMS's maximum continuous/peak power output or its minimum output voltage before the low voltage cutoff is activated.
Regarding your comment on the battery gauge on the BAC-601 display,
"it never goes below 5 bars", I am wondering whether these were
originally designed for use with lead acid batteries (like the throttle mounted LED gauges) in which case the battery display will be totally inaccurate and will always read way too high with a lithium battery.
Unfortunately, I don't think there is any easy way of calibrating the gauge to allow it to operate more accurately.
Placing a suitable resistor into the battery feed wire going to the BAC-601 display might improve its accuracy, but I suspect that the battery gauge might then read much lower while the backlight was turned on.
The LED gauges on the 48V GM throttles will remain fully lit for ~95% of a lithium battery's discharge cycle, and the Green and Amber LEDs will eventually begin to go off in quick succession, just before the battery's
BMS cuts the power off completely.
I suspect that your battery's
BMS is simply cutting the power off under load because the battery voltage is dropping too low, even though the LCD gauge indicates that your battery is still full.
Alan