Complete Engineering Article
What is EV Battery Pack Sizing
EV battery pack sizing converts the vehicle power requirement and desired range into stored energy, current, capacity, and discharge rate. A useful pack specification is more than a kWh number. It must include voltage, amp-hours, continuous current, peak current, reserve capacity, and a realistic safety factor. The calculator keeps these values separate because each one affects a different part of the electrical system.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Energy Capacity Fundamentals
Energy capacity is measured in watt-hours. If a vehicle requires a certain power level for a certain number of hours, the pack must store at least that much usable energy. Real systems are not ideal, so efficiency must be included. Controller losses, motor losses, wiring losses, tire losses, and operating conditions all reduce the amount of battery energy that becomes useful vehicle motion.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Voltage and Amp-Hour Capacity
Amp-hour capacity depends on voltage. A 48 V pack and a 96 V pack can store the same energy with different amp-hour ratings. This is why comparing batteries only by Ah is misleading. The calculator first calculates energy, then converts to Ah at the selected nominal voltage. This makes the relationship between voltage, energy, and current clear.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Continuous Current and Peak Current
Current determines conductor size, controller stress, connector heating, and battery discharge load. Continuous current is the current required during sustained operation. Peak current is the short-duration allowance used for acceleration, launch, or climbing events. A design may have enough energy for the range target but still fail if it cannot safely supply the required current.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
C Rating Explained
C rating is a normalized discharge measure. A pack with 20 Ah capacity delivering 40 A is discharging at 2 C. The minimum C rating reported by the calculator is not a product recommendation; it is an engineering requirement derived from current and capacity. Thermal testing and manufacturer data are still needed before final hardware selection.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Reserve Capacity
Reserve capacity prevents the design from depending on every last watt-hour in the pack. Batteries are affected by temperature, age, voltage sag, and cutoff limits. A reserve also helps maintain performance near the end of a run. In competition projects, reserve capacity can be the difference between finishing a run and stopping just short of the target.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Efficiency and Range
Average speed affects runtime. For a fixed range, a higher average speed reduces the hours of operation but may increase aerodynamic power demand. This calculator accepts a power requirement directly, so the user should feed it a realistic power value from motor sizing, measured telemetry, or a drive cycle estimate. The battery calculator and motor sizing calculator are intended to be used together.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Battery Weight Estimates
Battery weight is estimated from energy density as an engineering placeholder. The calculator uses a conservative pack-level assumption because cells, busbars, enclosure, BMS, cooling, compression, and wiring all add mass. Final mass should be replaced with measured or vendor-neutral pack design data once the architecture is known.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Worked Battery Sizing Example
As a worked example, a vehicle needing 4 kW average power for 30 km at 30 km/h runs for one hour. At 85 percent system efficiency, with 20 percent reserve and a 1.2 safety factor, the required stored energy is substantially higher than 4 kWh. At 48 V, that energy turns into an Ah requirement and a current requirement that must both be satisfied.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Common Battery Sizing Mistakes
Common mistakes include confusing Wh and Ah, ignoring reserve capacity, using peak motor power as average cruise power, assuming the full nominal battery capacity is usable, and forgetting voltage sag. Another common error is sizing range before estimating vehicle power. The correct workflow is to estimate power demand, define the drive cycle, then size energy and current capability.
In FIRGELLI engineering resources, the important habit is to separate the requirement from the component choice. The calculator exposes the physics, the article explains the assumptions, and the final design remains the responsibility of the engineer. Record the inputs used, repeat the calculation with conservative values, and validate the result with measurement whenever possible.
Worked Example and Engineering Review
A practical workflow is to run the calculator once with optimistic assumptions, once with expected assumptions, and once with conservative assumptions. The spread between those answers is often more useful than a single result. If a small input change produces a large output change, that input deserves measurement, testing, or a larger safety factor.
For EV projects, the most valuable early calculations are those that prevent mismatched subsystems. The motor, battery, controller, gearing, wiring, and thermal design must agree with one another. A power requirement that looks acceptable can create a current requirement the battery cannot supply. A gear ratio that produces enough torque can push the motor beyond its efficient speed range. The purpose of this page is to reveal those interactions before hardware decisions are made.