I thought I would "concluded" some of the ideas and thoughts that we had on this thread so I wouldn't leave people hanging about what might come next. Anyway, I've had the 2014 SR for a little while now and I can say that it is a great bike, I'm not sure if that means anything since I haven't rode much before the SR interestingly the thing is that a lot people transition from the Vstrom which was what I had. For me the ability to finely control the bike was one of my greatest motivations to switch to the SR that and my beginning hobby on riding didn't mix well with all the hills in Missouri and shifting.
Mostly I was stuck on this statement:
During an ordinary charging cycle, when the cells are balanced, the charger (not the BMS) senses that the power pack is full and terminates the charging cycle with a “green light.†The BMS does have a redundant back-up mechanism to prevent overcharging of the power pack. If the charger fails to terminate a charging-cycle when the power pack is full, the BMS will terminate charging itself to prevent damage.
This is on page 6.10 of the 2014 manual and 6.6 of the 2013 manual. I know that most would either disagree and semi disagree with this statement but I did some research into this and I believe that it is true. The BMS serves as a backup in this case and if everything goes "smoothly" with the charging then the charger would terminate the charging. Having redundancy in the system is important especially if it is charging and protection of the battery. The other question that came up was that the charger (Meanwells) are a dumb devices that doesn't monitor charging so my thought was to trace the Meanwells into the battery box to see if there is a monitoring circuit that would prove that the charger does monitor charging under normal circumstances. I haven't done that yet as I'm having too much fun to start taking the bike apart.
Also as I mentioned before I would like the fuel cell system to be as much plug and play as possible and with that the idea was to use the on board charging path or the main vdc bus. The on board would be easier but limited in that if I was to upgrade to a 3kW fuel cell it would not take the current. Biff mentioned that I would have to be rolling for a long time to turn on the fuel cell to charge the battery and that got me thinking about an experiment to verify this. A gas 1kW generator could be used. I would have to switch it on on the highway or something and monitor the SOC after the ride.
This would be a temporary solution to get the fuel cell working in theory and a good first step, beyond that would be to connect to the main vdc bus which gets all sorts of complicated. Anyway I haven’t verify any of this just hypothesis but once I have some time to get the cover off the charger I’ll be able to verify the monitoring circuit. Also have to borrow a small generator.
Anyway that's it for now. Just wanted to share thoughts and ideas, also to thank all that shared their ideas and thoughts. Thanks