The battery cell voltage is a given, voltage cannot be raised. Current being manipulated after taken from the cells, does not concern the cells. If you want to be easier on the cells, you need to increase the number of them, which means increasing the battery capacity. More cells will have a lighter current load and last longer, and will be used more efficiently as well.Holm86 wrote: ↑14 Jun 2024, 17:55How does battery size influence amps?Vanja #66 wrote: ↑14 Jun 2024, 14:32Because ES needs to last a long time. Today they should live through 12 race weekends, meaning at least 7500-8000km of hard and constant use. By making an oversized battery you reduce the current (Amps) and thus the charge/discharge rate (aka C-rate) which needs to be kept low for long battery life.Holm86 wrote: ↑14 Jun 2024, 14:07But what you're saying there makes zero sense, why on earth would you have a 44MJ battery if in could never go under 40MJ in that case.
The battery will probably have a minimum charge of perhaps 0.5MJ which means the maximum charge capacity probably won't be over 5MJ as the maximum state can only ever go 4MJ over the minimum, you need a bit og leeway
And as I said, the current regulations say exactly the same as those of 2026 when it comes to the delta charge of the battery, so why would it need to be bigger
And C rate will just increase as battery size does, all other aspects kept the same.
I know there need to be some overhead, as a battery charges faster at the lower end of its capacity.
If you want to lower amps, you need to raise the voltage.
Only thing I can't think off is if internal resistance of the battery lowers as capacity increases, but it shouldn't be so much that I can't be overcome with higher voltage

