StirCrazy wrote:
not better, Ill try streamline my paragraph. prismatic cells are not "cheeper" or "lower quality" the reason for the higher cost involved in say battle born is the increased labour costs to assemble the batteries and the fact they havent realy keept up to the dropping LFP prices as they nave a nich market and do a good sales job of making people think they are vastly superior to other batteries.
Battle born is a parallel/series battery where my battery is a series arangment, and in my 5th wheel I am building a series/parrallel setup , and yes if one cell goes bad in a prismatic you will notice it more, but at the same time it would take me about 5 min to replace the cell with a new one, I would be a few hours to try fix a battle born and need a lot more specialized tools
in the battle born they use 120 1AH cells to make there 100AH battery so they basicly have 30 parralel lines, so if you lose one series line, you lose 1/30th of the battery capacity so yes in that way you have more built in redundency but I was talking about the chance of there being a problem with the battery not the effect. if you notice you lost a cell are you going to sent it in for repair? well that depends I don't think the adverage person would even notice it and run a defective battery for ever. hopefully they have the BMS set up to let you know if there is an issue as that is capable of knowing right away.
does this make battle born better, maybe if your talking redundency, but I still don't think that redundency is worth the price there asking, the battle born by this time should be about 700 bucks concidering you can get thoes 120 cells for under 200 bucks.
I have been looking at them laitly and trying to decide weather to build a prismatic for the 5th wheel or try build out of cilendrical cells. its a lot cheeper for me to buy the clindrical cells, and I cam print specilized holders with my 3D printer, but I would have to buy something to spot weld them togeather and figure that out.
Thanks for taking the time to focus on cell arrangement, Steve.
Based on the two following quotes from your post (in bold italics), I believe you somewhat agree with my premise a 100ah Battleborn (BB) battery with the 120 cell, parallel/series cell arrangement is more reliable, has more redundancy than a 100ah battery with 4 in-series prismatic cells:
1. If a 100ah BB battery experiences a bad cell "
you lose 1/30th of the battery capacity so yes in that way you have more built in redundency".
2. If you're using a 100ah lifepo4 battery with 4 in-series prismatic cells "
yes if one cell goes bad in a prismatic you will notice it more. Agree. However, let's put your comment into complete perspective. If one cell is truly bad, has no output, the *entire* battery will cease to operate or produce any output.
From my perspective, this represents a big difference in redundancy no matter how you dice it. A 100ah BB can sustain a number of bad cells and continue to work satisfactorily. A 4 in-series prismatic cell battery could potentially have no output with just one bad cell.
Yes, there are other factors that play into the reliability of any given lifepo4 battery, but my discussion is only focusing only cell arrangement.
As for whether Battleborn batteries are worth their premium price, well their value (or lack of) is solely in the eyes of the beholder. Probably the easiest comparison to make here involves automotive tools. There are Snap-On tools and there are Harbor Freight tools. Each has their rightful place in the marketplace, just like Battleborn and other lifepo4 battery manufacturers do. There's no one best tool or battery for everyone.
The "best" battery for us has been the DIY 200ah lifepo4 battery we built almost 2 years ago. Cheap, small, light, reliable and safely operates at .3c charge/.6c discharge in ambient temps down to -10f. As I've mentioned a number of times before, one of our best upgrades ever---a game-changer.