#1
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Has anyone considered mounting spot welding electrodes?
http://www.sunstoneengineering.com/s...p2007datasheet
I'm researching the build process of converting cars to electric power. This is most commonly done with lead-acid golf-cart batteries of 6v. The massive weight of these units poses a big performance challenge. Because of these performance drawbacks, builders are increasingly creating packs from LiFePO4 cells. A comparable pack will occupy 1/4 of the space, can be packed into nooks and crannies that lead acid batteries will not fit, and will weigh 50%-70% less. The downside (aside from their greater cost - about 5x that of lead-acid) is that it takes 1000 of these cells (about twice the size of a "D" size battery) to create the average pack, each of which needs to be spot-welded together, like a bigger cordless phone battery pack. Eight separate welds for each cell. You see where I'm going with this. It'd be cool to set the cells in a fixture, place the tabs in the appropriate places, index the welding electrode to the proper starting position, and stand back and let a machine make the 8000, repeatable and uniform spot welds. |
#2
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I cannot see any reason why this will not work. My only concern would be electrical interference, but good grounding and screening/shielding should take care of that.
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