alohart said:A Tesla battery pack contains thousands of small battery cells unlike an i3's battery pack that contains only 96 large battery cells connected in series. If 25% of an i3's cells were eliminated, the output voltage of the pack would drop by 25% which would not work with the motor and charging electronics.i3Houston said:Well no need to replace full battery pack but maybe like model 3 mid range(battery pack with just 25%fewer cells or modules) , that way weight stays the same but the range goes up.
Some have suggested that the space used by the REx engine could hold additional battery cells, but this would not work because the output voltage would be too high. BMW's choice to use large-format battery cells in a single series-connected string simplifies pack construction and likely minimizes cost but eliminates the possibility of increasing or decreasing battery pack capacity by merely adding or removing cells. Instead, we have seen the capacity of an i3's battery pack increase only when higher capacity battery cells of the identical dimensions have become available (e.g., 60 Ah -> 94 Ah -> 120 Ah).
Tesla battery packs conceptually contain strings of 96 series-connected battery cells like an i3 but with the multiple strings connected in parallel, so the output voltage is similar to an i3's battery pack. To vary the battery pack capacity, Tesla needs only to add or remove some of the 96-cell strings. Doing so maintains the same output voltage which the motor and charging electronics require. A battery pack containing thousands of small cells certainly makes pack construction more complex and likely more expensive, but it does allow packs of various capacities to be built using the same battery cells.
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