Hi Jim and
to the forum.
It is possible to use two 36V battery packs wired in series to power the bike at 72V and even reconnect them in parallel for charging from a single 36V charger:
However, it would take ~24 hours to charge a 36V 120Ah pack from a 36V 5A charger.
Also, if each 36v pack has its own
BMS, you may need to add a couple of diodes to prevent damaging to the first
BMS that cuts out:
They would need to be pretty big diodes to handle the sort of current you will be drawing.
Alternatively, you could build a single 72V battery in two sections and use a single 72V
BMS, but the 21 balance leads would need to be connected to all parallelled cell groups spread across both halves of the pack.
This would also require a 72V charger, calibrated for 84.0V maximum charging voltage.
If you're building your own 72V pack from 18650 cells you will need 400 individual 3000mAh cells configured 20S20P
(either 10S20P or 20S10P each side) to achieve your 60Ah capacity.
Check out this handy
battery configurator for help with pack shapes and sizes.
The cells and a
BMS must be capable of producing at least 150 Amps if you are aiming for maximum torque, check out the
72V Dynamometer data for further information.
I don't suppose there is sufficient room to accomodate 10 of these Nissan Leaf battery modules:
Each module is 7.6V nominal and has a guaranteed 54Ah capacity.
(Click on the above photo for more details.)Anyway, it sounds like a very interesting conversion and it would be nice to see some pictures of your progress so far.
Alan EDIT: Picture URL changed as hybridautocenter.com website is currently inaccessible.