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Solid State Lithium Battery Bank

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8 hours ago, Meredith Poor said:

https://yoshinopower.com/

This is now a real product that ordinary people can buy.

A product which can't be charged below 32F or discharged above 104F... And requires lots of Cobalt. 

So, worse than LFP--> Yikes

Uh, this isn't exactly solid state.  Lithium Titanate are more "solid state" than this battery as both can have nails shoved through them and continue to work.  

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20 hours ago, footeab@yahoo.com said:

A product which can't be charged below 32F or discharged above 104F...

Sounds like a human.

What a design flaw.

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Well Will Prosise just tested a "solid state" battery and it exploded into flames when punctured. .https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pu8hs6hmyk  

I have to wonder if this "product" uses identical cells. Will's "solid state" used cobalt in its chemistry too, but did claim different battery parameters so maybe not.

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(edited)

3 hours ago, footeab@yahoo.com said:

Well Will Prosise just tested a "solid state" battery and it exploded into flames when punctured. .https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pu8hs6hmyk  

I have to wonder if this "product" uses identical cells. Will's "solid state" used cobalt in its chemistry too, but did claim different battery parameters so maybe not.

and it exploded???

as usually you babble BS and have no idea what you are talking about

nope it caught fire......

huge difference between the two

 lead acid batteries, now they can explode as you can have the evolution of hydrogen gas when charging 

so which battery has explosion risks?????..... only an idiot would claim a lead acid battery is safer.....

When charging a lead-acid battery, electrolysis produces hydrogen and oxygen gases that can create an explosive mixture. Hydrogen is flammable and can explode in certain concentrations in air, while oxygen supports combustion. These gases enter the air through the battery's vent caps. If the vent cap is defective or plugged, it can't release the gas effectively, which can create an unsafe condition. Other factors that can contribute to an explosion include: 

 
  • Low electrolyte levels
    When electrolyte levels fall below the top of the plates, a low resistive bridge can form that can cause an arc or spark in a cell
  • Battery cell failure
    When a cell "blows" or can't be charged properly, it can produce dangerously high amounts of hydrogen 

 

 

and you claim to be an Engineer........My bet is no you are not an engineer

 

PS how are your tunnel schemes working out....when do you break ground?????

image.jpeg.0ef736d153c825f5fff3d1652465a2f8.jpeg

Edited by notsonice

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Bummer Alert!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsZfjF9SObo

Turns out there are some questions about whether this is a solid state battery. The above YT video explains the doubts, but doesn't necessarily refute the assertions of the vendor. We may or may not be there yet.

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