SOC(%) Temperature | 100 | 90 | 80 | 70 | 60 | 50 | 40 | 30 | 20 | 10 | 0 |
55°C | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 0 |
25°C | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 0 |
10°C | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 56 | 56 | 0 |
0°C | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 140 | 140 | 140 | 140 | 0 |
-10°C | 280 | 280 | 280 | 280 | 140 | 140 | 140 | 140 | 140 | 0 | 0 |
-20°C | 140 | 140 | 140 | 140 | 84 | 84 | 84 | 28 | 28 | 0 | 0 |
When looking at this table taken from the specs for this battery, you can see an 'anomaly' at 10C and SOC <30% since the max discharge current drops radically, and strangely, recovers to .5C at 0C. The question is if you need to interpolate this 56-280A, from 30%..20%, and also from 10..25C . Or perhaps you can do 280 already at 15C? Big difference. Second, I wonder if any existing BMS allows you to program this kind of parameter?