You just invented new way for storage Amps on demand - keeping it in postal/courier service (response time is a bit long , tough)... LOL
What kind of price are we looking at for the packs you've built and what AH are you at?I have been forced to sit around thinking about the nimh battery pack, because I am awaiting parts for the chain bike and for more batteries to arrive. I'm about to go out on a limb and will probably have to eat my words since I have before, but here goes.
I think it is going to end up being that I have to buy the highest number of amps for my pack which my controller will handle. I think the batteries I am working with have a 1/1 draw rate. I also think the batteries are over rated on the packaging. So here is what I think will happen.
I think that I will eventually get to a point where the pack pulls up a hill effectively. At that point, I think I will be able to count what I have and get an idea of what it takes to run my bike. Since shipping is so slow from Hong Kong, the only place batteries come from, it might take a month or two more, but I think I am zeroing in on it.
If the factory rating were honest, I would be on the money now. According to the label I have right at 30 ah of battery. I'm thinking that the pack runs at about 2/3 throttle of the sla pack. That is just a guess, but I wouldn't be surprised if the pack is over rated by that much.
I am rough figuring the AA cells at 2ah real figures, the C cells at 5ah more or less. That would make my pack about twenty amps. two thirds of the max draw of the controller. If that assumption is true, I need five more battery strings to make the total of thirty. I am hoping that I am right and that more batteries will increase the pool of amps available to the motor. If not I am throwing good money after bad.
This battery pack is not going to be cheap but it is going to have a few real advantages. If it draws at one to one from the battery pack, then the pack should outlast anything around. It should deliver the full load for an hour, that is about fifteen miles on my bike. Plus it won't be pulling max amps the whole time so that should even increase the range by say 25% more.\
According to the claims (most likely over rated) the batteries can be charged up to a thousand times. Even if that is 30% over rated it is still two years. It is also easy to find the bad string, then the bad cell inside the string. In other words repairing the pack will be cheap and easy. I have a pretty good handle on charging them now.
I use three battery tenders from Wally mart. They are on a 1 hour timer from home depot. I am still getting the charging times down, but they charge roughly 1/3 amp per hour. So I charge them until the first battery reaches 13.5 volts (+/-.1v) Then I remove it from the charger and keep charging the others until the next one reaches 13.5. Then if the last one doesn't seem to be responding I remove the nut and bolt holding all the wires from the strings together and check to see if they are all the same voltage. They should be at that point. Usually I find one that is open or not taking the charge for some reason. i find and repair the problem and reassemble the pack. It is ready to go again.
Now this is NOT for everyone. I have lots of time and love mysteries. When the pack won't charge right up, it's like a great murder mystery for me. I just take over the kitchen table and start to eliminate the usual suspects.
So far it has been quality control by the assembler (me) or a bad cell left over from the great melt down. I have this pack set up so that it can easily be charged on the three battery maintainers from Wally Mart which I use for the sla. For the nimh I use the timer, but for the sla I just plug them into the wall. But I can also change the wiring quickly to set them up parallel, so that I can use on my car battery type charger. I increased the number of leads from the car battery charger to three. If i remove the wires from the pack that makes it a series connection, I can charge all three batteries at once with the one charger. I do that when I want to charge a lot of batteries at once. Three on the tenders and three on the car charger. It sounds like a lot of work but it works just fine once I got used to it. The car type charger works at 2amps minimum but spread that over a couple of batteries and each is getting less than the full load. It doesn't seem to have hurt them any yet.