Hi David,
Something is not correct in the numbers that you give us.
If there are 24 modules of 4 parallel cells, then the pack
voltage is about 77V (24 x 3.2V) which makes no sense in a 300V vehicle,
so I suspect that there still are 96 series cells.

The 40Ah is incapable of giving the truck a spiffy acceleration
because typical for this type of vehicle is at minimum 250A current limit
(which is what my US Electricar S10 truck had and it is similar to the Ranger)
and since the recommended max draw on these batteries is 3C the 40Ah cell
would need to be limited to 120A so my guess is that there are 2x 40Ah cell
in parallel or there actually are 80Ah cells in use, but size constraints may
have made 40Ah necessary and they are buddy-paired, but still 96 cells in 
series.
That would give a total max pack capacity of 24.6 kWh and at a typical 
consumption
of 300 Wh per mile for a truck, that gives 82 miles of range. Drive it careful
(slower) and you can get up to 90 miles of range in practice.
That would mean that a total of 192 cells of 40Ah capacity are used.
As I said before - it makes more sense to use the 80Ah cells (half the terminals
to connect) but of course I do not know the reason to select 40Ah.

Cor van de Water
Chief Scientist
Proxim Wireless

office +1 408 383 7626          Skype: cor_van_de_water
XoIP   +31 87 784 1130          private: cvandewater.info
www.proxim.com


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-----Original Message-----
From: EV [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Miller via EV
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2015 9:38 AM
To: Alan Arrison
Cc: Electric Vehicle Discussion List
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EV Digest, Vol 32, Issue 18

 Hi Alan.
  Thanks for the insight!

  I do worry about the batteries.  It's not my Li conversion.
So, I'm short on many details.  Here is what I know.

  It ranges 90 miles per charge under easy use.  45 miles per charge when 
driven aggressively.
  The 40 AH Lithiums are packed into 24 4-cell parallel modules.
So, these modules are 160 AH with 1/4 of the total current flowing through each 
cell?
  Does this explain the good range?
  Does this significantly improve the Lithium longevity?
  My 13 year old NiMHs still get ~70 miles.  But my power is uncomfortably low.

Thanks!
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