Thanks for that link @GerharddP, very interesting.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/bu_803a_cell_mismatch_balancing
extract from that page:
Let’s look at what happens to a weak cell that is strung together with stronger cells in a pack. The weak cell holds less capacity and is discharged more quickly than their strong brothers. Going empty first causes their strong brothers to overrun their feeble sibling to the point where a high load can push the weak cell into reverse polarity. Nickel-cadmium can tolerate a reverse voltage of minus 0.2V at a few milliamps, but exceeding this will cause a permanent electrical short. On charge, the weak cell reaches full charge first, and then goes into heat-generating overcharge, while the strong brothers still accept charge and stay cool. The weak cell experiences a disadvantage on both charge and discharge; it continues to weaken until giving up the struggle.
This is exactly what I was looking for and although they are referring to battery packs its very interesting and reasonably relevant to a series mod configuration. Scary thought that the weaker cell could potentially go into reverse polarity the question is would someone realise that this is happening before it ever gets to that point? In a 2 battery configuration I would think they would definitely notice this as the series voltage is going to be horrible and indicate flat battery (regulated mod)
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/bu_803a_cell_mismatch_balancing
extract from that page:
Let’s look at what happens to a weak cell that is strung together with stronger cells in a pack. The weak cell holds less capacity and is discharged more quickly than their strong brothers. Going empty first causes their strong brothers to overrun their feeble sibling to the point where a high load can push the weak cell into reverse polarity. Nickel-cadmium can tolerate a reverse voltage of minus 0.2V at a few milliamps, but exceeding this will cause a permanent electrical short. On charge, the weak cell reaches full charge first, and then goes into heat-generating overcharge, while the strong brothers still accept charge and stay cool. The weak cell experiences a disadvantage on both charge and discharge; it continues to weaken until giving up the struggle.
This is exactly what I was looking for and although they are referring to battery packs its very interesting and reasonably relevant to a series mod configuration. Scary thought that the weaker cell could potentially go into reverse polarity the question is would someone realise that this is happening before it ever gets to that point? In a 2 battery configuration I would think they would definitely notice this as the series voltage is going to be horrible and indicate flat battery (regulated mod)