Pebblefeline
Established Member
I only get
Roewe eRx5
Or is this the same?
Roewe eRx5
Or is this the same?
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Don’t think so, it’s an SUV…On a this the same?
Yes, my CMU readings are 3.22V when fully charged.Set to mg5 profile
It turns out they aren’t module s they are the Cell Monitoring Units that govern groups of cells
I believe the long range has 96 cells so in groups of 4 with a CMU in each? Giving 24 CMU’s?
These re reported by car scanner and each CMU reports in the cell voltage to the Bms I think.
Can anyone else with car scanner look at their CMU readings?
Now we are so far beyond my knowledge, I started reading a CMU research paper and ……. Well I got a headache
As a rough calculation from 10% of actual size (rounded - 61kWh or should it be 57 usable ?) would need approx 55kWh (51kWh).
Onboard charger is 6.6kW so would require over 9 (8.5) hours plus balancing time to go 10-100%. - Just about a full at work
Can't remember if the 5 Trophy has 11kW charging, if so times obviously reduce a fair chunk.
All rough guesstimations.
Sounds about right if that's the power supplied. 93% added of 61kWh is about 57kWh or 93% of usable 57kWH is 53kWh.I did a few weeks ago on my 74 plate trophy 7% to 100% charge with a (7kW) home charger at a rate of 6.5kW it took 8 hours 58 minutes for 60.48kWg of energy including balancing.
You can only access/charge the ‘usable’ battery capacity.Sounds about right if that's the power supplied. 93% added of 61kWh is about 57kWh or 93% of usable 57kWH is 53kWh.
Take away conversion losses from supplied 60.48 from that added and it could match using either usable or total capacity.
I don't think the buffers top and bottom are kept separate in different cells from the usable part, it is still a 61kWH battery pack, the whole of which gets charged and discharged, just the very top and very bottom isn't usable.You can only access/charge the ‘usable’ battery capacity.
The theoretical capacity of a battery pack is derived from the maximum capacity of each cell, e.g. 150Ah from 2.5V-4.3V.I don't think the buffers top and bottom are kept separate in different cells from the usable part, it is still a 61kWH battery pack, the whole of which gets charged and discharged, just the very top and very bottom isn't usable.
Precisely, they are software buffers for the whole battery preventing overcharging and overdraining, not physical entities in their own right.The theoretical capacity of a battery pack is derived from the maximum capacity of each cell, i.e. 150Ah from 2.5V-4.3V.
The BMS limits this voltage range (e.g 2.8V -4.1V) which will slightly decrease the overall capacity but greatly increase the longevity of the battery.
The top/bottom buffers can therefore not be accessed.
You can only access/charge the ‘usable’ battery capacity.