Some bms can be customized to have a high and low bms cut offs like the ant bms I use
But since I draw too many amps I cannot use it unless I add an external contactor (maybe one day...)
So I just use it for balance
From the little I know u need cc-cv charger (I think even lead acid chargers use cc-cv but different bulk charging?)
I had a old lead acid charger that the manufacture changed to lithium charger, so it can be done?
Not sure how it was done..
If your happy with like 5-10 ? amps charging there are solar buck/boost green chargers u can buy off eBay for 30-40$ that can use variable dc input like old computer power supply and give you variable dc cc-cv output?
Ant bms..I use 32s but don¡¯t need to use all of them. ??
Charger. ?
I¡¯m no expert but these have worked for me and my budget?
On Tuesday, April 28, 2020, 03:32:01 AM PDT, greenpjs04 <forums@...> wrote:
Wow!? Thank you for all the responses.? I will investigate all your suggestions further.? One topic that came up but has me confused is the BMS needed for LiFePo4 batteries.? From past research, I know that some cells offered for sale are just that - cells without any BMS.? To use those, I would have to add a BMS designed for LiFePo4 chemistry.? DualPro's website says their chargers "can" be programmed for LiFePo4 but I doubt that applies to my 10 year old AGM charger.
So, moving on to the LiFePo4 battery packs with built in BMS's, how does one charge those?? I found very little detail mentioned. Just things like "Includes BMS!" and similar claims.? Can any charger with a voltage above the battery voltage be used to charge these batteries?? In other words, does the internal BMS fully protect the batteries by handling charge rate and monitoring state of charge to avoid over-charging?