What are your thoughts about using a 50 caliber ammo can with the gasket removed in conjunction with small LiPo bags for each battery?
If your concern is safety I would leave the gasket in the can to prevent air from coming in. most materials need air to combust.What are your thoughts about using a 50 caliber ammo can with the gasket removed in conjunction with small LiPo bags for each battery?
Leaving in the gasket would effectively allow the ammo can to become pressurized and potentially become a bomb. I don't know at what point the gasket or the metal shell will fail but don't want to find out.......If your concern is safety I would leave the gasket in the can to prevent air from coming in. most materials need air to combust.
Sadly not true, lithium is oxygen-rich, it doesn’t need an external air supply. All you can do is cool the battery If it starts to overheat.If your concern is safety I would leave the gasket in the can to prevent air from coming in. most materials need air to combust.
I am a Senior Engineer for a well known global product safety group. Within my expertise is the use of batteries in a wide range of equipment types including ITE, industrial, etc.
Thank you!!!!! This is precisely what I was looking for: a definitive answer from an expert in the field. Based on what you've shared, containment is pretty much the only thing we can do. I think I'll go with a gasketless ammo can and add additional venting in the top. I'll also store batteries in LiPo bags individually inside the ammo can. Maybe even use cement board dividers to further separate the batteries. Thank you again for sharing your knowledge!Sadly not true, lithium is oxygen-rich, it doesn’t need an external air supply. All you can do is cool the battery If it starts to overheat.
A military grade ammo can is a pretty good storage but put enough battery packs together in there and there’s a possibility it will create a bomb! I think a bag is better, it can help contain a fire but will vent, I don’t know if taking the gasket of the can will be enough.
I used extinguisher rated for chemical fires, home type. Worked fine on a lipo fire when I brainlessly charged a 3 s pack at 4 s.. Resultant fire was in basement and impressive! Cover with sand works as well. Again smothers the fire. Lipos combust when abused somehow, not spontaneously. Lion, I'm not experienced.Yes, that's one of the threads I read through. The trouble is there is nothing definitive about the extinguishing procedure. What's presented is too ambiguous.
The smoke emitted by such a fire is another significant hazard.
Any firefighters out there with knowledge on this subject? It can't be sequestered too deep because we have the issue of the Chevy Bolts having a defect that causes fires.
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