Well, It had to happen...
one day...
I knew that the battery is 70Ah ( rated) and i had my Cycle analyst installed and calibrated and i was thinking that the BMS would protect the battery once it is at a voltage equivalent to something like 65Ah leaving 5Ah for safety and not drain the pack entirely... but it wasn't
Fortunately i was with my friend who have his gas motorcycle (250cc) and was at 4km from home.. so i used the cahrger extension cord attached to both motorcycle and he towed me to destination... it was a little embarassing... but i assumed what happened..
I tried to crank the throttle couples of time but it reset( to protect the cells from overdischarging every times) and it does that well.
Once i got my zero in the garage i connected my celllog multi cell voltage monitor to my battery to see at wich low voltage was the 14 string of cells. All was at 3.410V +/-10mV except the cell string no 1 that was at 3.002. I suspect that it's this string that had make the BMS to cut the power of the battery due to the low voltage portection detection.
So i know now that i have a cell string that is 400mV lower when the pack is discharged... probably a lower capacity once or that it have a higher internal resistance. and i also know that the pack was fully balanced before the ride as usual. the BMS actually balance the cell in +/- 5mV between all 14 string si it's really good. All cells are at 4,150V +/-5mV once the green led of the charger is blinking that indicate a fully balanced pack.
Now if the string would have been equal to the rest of string at 3.400mV, I would be really surprised if that wold have gaved me the missing 11Ah.. but i think not since the voltage slope between the 3.400V and the 3.000V limit is really high , leaving probably few Ah but not 11Ah...
Now let's find at wich rate these cells were used:
I made 53.3km and used 59Ah at a rate of 57Wh per km for 3037Wh total capacity draw at 51.2km/h average
According to my calculations, the average power was 53.3km / 51.2km/h = 1.04h of run time s
the average power was3037Wh/1.04h= 2920Watts of power
The average voltage is 3037Wh/59Ah= 51.5V
the average current is 2920Watts/ 51.5V = 56.7 Amperes.
Now if the pack is rated 70Ah and that the average current i used is 56.7A, the C Rate that the cells were used is 56.7A /70Ah =
0.8CNow according to the original specs and graph of the Molicells IMR26700 , these cells when drained at 1C at ambient 21 celsius , have around 80mAh capacity from 3.400V and 3.00V
The Zero DS 2011 is made of 14 string of 24 cells in parallel. so 24 cells x 80mAh is 1.92Ah.
This mean that the way i used this battery, when it cut, it had still 1.92Ah left. And i used 59Ah so the total pack capacity is more like 60.92Ah, when drianed down to 3.00V wich is the low voltage protection.
This is 13% less capacity than the rated capacity.
According to the specsheet of the cells, this is the equivalent resting capacity of a battery that would have been used 200 cycles !... but it only was used for ... 8 cycles from now
The advertised 4.4kWh is far too optimistic since i got 3.037kWh
Doc