Everest
Established Member
My 2p worth...If anyone sees any other errors, please point them out
The 51kWh is actually a rounded up figure. The 400v can only be achieved by charging the 104 cells to 3.85V .....
3.85V is outside the safe working voltage range of LiFePO4 cells. Maximum charge voltage is 3.65V, not 3.85V. Above 3.65V, damage will occur due in part to some cell swelling and internal de-lamination that may take place.Any cell voltage above 3.4V is surface charge, put it under load and that 0.45VDC over charge will vanish
That seems likely. I saw an image of the battery pack from a breaker that showed raised areas on the outer casing where, presumably, the cells were located. There were 4 rows of 9 areas on the outer edges and 2 rows of 8 areas in the middle. That comes to (4 x 9) + (2 x 8) = 52 positions where cells might be. Assuming 2 cells are situated in each raised area, that equals 104 cells.So it looks like there really are 104 cells
If that is the case, then, as we know the nominal voltage of an LFP cells is defined at 3.2V, the the 'nominal' voltage of the MG4 SE SR will be 104 x 3.2V = 332.8V.
Assuming the quoted 51kWh capacity of the SE SR is correct and an 'actual' capacity, rather than 'usable' capacity, then we can deduce that each cell has a capacity of 51000Wh/3.2V/104 = just over 153Ah each.
I read (on here, I think) that some newer builds of the SE SR quote a capacity of 49kWh. I wonder if that is simply a change in metric from actual to useable capacity? i.e. assuming 4% actual remaining when 'usable' capacity has reached zero.
The whole calculation thing actually requires a standard for cell load testing and a definition for nominal voltage.

FWIW, if anyone is interested, here is a graphic showing LiFePO4 voltage for different SOC and different charge/discharge rates.

Last edited: