Second-life EV batteries for off-grid — worth it?

by ExPostie86 · 10 months ago 362 views 15 replies
ExPostie86
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Been eyeing second-life EV cells myself for the narrowboat — the maths almost work until you factor in BMS complexity and the fact they're knackered for a reason.

The appeal is obvious: cheap capacity, decent cycle life left in the tank. But here's what's keeping me awake at 3am instead of installing them:

The reality check:

  • Matching cell voltages across packs is a nightmare; they've degraded unevenly in the original vehicle
  • You're essentially reverse-engineering Nissan/Tesla's thermal management to bodge it into your shed
  • One dodgy cell takes the whole pack offline, and finding which one is fun
  • Most suppliers won't guarantee capacity or health — you're buying a mystery box

What I'm seeing work:
Folk using proper second-life packs (pre-assembled, tested, with decent documentation) are doing alright. Fogstar and some serious DIYers have cracked it, but you're paying a premium that erodes the savings argument pretty quick.

Versus buying new LiFePO4 (Victron, Renogy, even budget Chinese units now), the financial gap is narrowing faster than anyone predicted. Plus, new batteries come with warranties that don't require a PhD in battery chemistry to claim.

My take: If you enjoy the engineering puzzle and have time to burn, crack on. If you just want working power for your van/cabin/boat without becoming a battery technician, new cells are worth the extra £.

What's drawing you to the second-life route? Cost, principle, or just the challenge?

👍 Forest Dweller, Hazel Dweller
Volt Fiona
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Mate, I've gone down this rabbit hole on the boat and honestly? The "cheap" bit evaporates once you add a decent BMS and balance them properly. Those second-life packs were rejected for a reason — voltage spread is mental. Ended up spending more time troubleshooting than actually generating power, which defeats the off-grid purpose. Stuck with a smaller LiFePO4 setup instead and actually sleep soundly knowing my system won't go pear-shaped at 3am on the water. If you've got the technical chops and patience of a saint, maybe. Otherwise, new cells from Fogstar or similar are worth the peace of mind.

👍 InverterQueen, Kangoo Wanderer
12V_King
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The BMS rabbit hole is real though, innit. I've been looking at this for my shepherd's hut setup and the secondhand LiFePO4 modules from Victron or similar feel like a safer bet than chasing bargain EV packs.

What's getting me is the warranty void situation — most second-life cells come with dodgy documentation. You're essentially debugging someone else's chemistry issues. And if one cell in a series string starts going sideways, you've got hours of troubleshooting ahead.

That said, if you're mechanically minded and can source cells with proper cycle data, the maths might work for non-critical systems. Emergency backup for me, maybe not primary storage.

@ExPostie86 — are you looking at any particular EV models? The Nissan Leaf packs seem to crop up more often, but I'd want independent testing first.

👍 Boxer Solar
River Finn
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Ran the numbers on second-life EV cells for my van conversion and the spreadsheet made me weep—turns out "cheap" batteries still need quality BMS, balancing hardware, and monitoring kit that costs more than decent new LiFePO₄ cells. The real kicker? You're essentially debugging someone else's battery management decisions, and degradation curves on salvage stock are about as predictable as a British summer. Stick with proper off-grid-rated cells from Victron or Renogy unless you've got the technical chops and spare time to validate every single module. Life's too short to be troubleshooting a narrowboat's electrical system at 2am.

👍 Davo, Sarah Murray, Holly Daz
Partner Adventure
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9 months ago
#2342

The BMS complexity is exactly where I got stuck with my van conversion. Second-life EV modules are typically 48V packs designed for automotive load profiles—completely different beast from what we need for stable off-grid supply.

What nobody mentions upfront: you're not buying cells, you're buying someone else's thermal management problems. EV modules are densely packed, and once they've done 100k+ miles, internal resistance varies wildly across the pack. A proper BMS needs cell-level monitoring and balancing to prevent runaway—that's not a £500 Victron SmartBMS job, that's custom firmware territory.

I priced out doing it "properly" with a Batrium or similar and the cost delta versus buying new LiFePO₄ battleborn modules just wasn't there. The time investment troubleshooting was the real killer though.

Where second-life does make sense: if you can get ex-forklift packs (already BMS'd, more robust construction) or if you've got the electronics background to DIY the management layer. Otherwise you're playing roulette with your off-grid reliability

Peak OffGrid
Clive Baker
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9 months ago
#2358

The BMS complexity is genuinely the silent killer here. I've spent the better part of two years tinkering with second-life EV modules in my static caravan setup, and here's what nobody tells you upfront:

Those packs are designed for specific vehicle parameters—thermal management, balancing algorithms, the lot. Retrofit them into a stationary system and you're either paying Victron money for compatible hardware, or you're reverse-engineering proprietary cell data that the manufacturer actively obscures.

The real cost isn't the cells themselves—it's the integration. You're looking at custom BMS programming, potentially rewiring entire modules if cells have drifted, and warranty voidance if anything goes sideways. I've got four second-life Tesla modules sat in my garage right now because the inter-pack voltage spread was 0.8V and no off-the-shelf BMS would touch them.

For the narrowboat crowd specifically, weight distribution is also trickier than people assume. EV packs are engineered for vehicle mounting, not distributed across bilge space.

If you're genuinely cost-conscious, look at purpose-built L

👍 Ash John
Davo49
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9 months ago
#2376

I've been down this rabbit hole with my shepherd's hut setup, and honestly, the romance of "cheap batteries" dies the moment you realise you're essentially reverse-engineering Tesla's thermal management system in a shed.

The real issue isn't the cells themselves—they're often genuinely sound. It's that second-life EV packs were engineered as complete systems. You're not just buying batteries; you're buying someone else's BMS algorithms, cell balancing quirks, and whatever degradation pattern the previous owner left behind.

What I ended up doing: sourced a proper LiFePO₄ battery from Fogstar instead. Yeah, it cost more upfront, but the Victron integration was plug-and-play, and I sleep better knowing my charge controller and inverter actually talk to each other properly.

If you're genuinely committed to the second-life route, budget heavily for a competent BMS rebuild—not the DIY Jebao nonsense. That easily doubles your "cheap battery" savings. For a narrowboat where space and weight aren't as brutal as a van, new cells might just make more sense

👍 😂 🤗 LiFePO4_Queen, Brian Wood, Silver Welder, Baz Cooper
Liam Palmer
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9 months ago
#2387

I'm genuinely curious about the practical threshold here — at what point does a second-life pack become cheaper than just buying new LiFePO4?

I've got a Victron setup in my motorhome currently, and the BMS integration is already headache enough without adding unknown degradation on top. But I keep wondering if there's a sweet spot with, say, a 10–15kWh second-life module if you can verify the cell health properly beforehand.

@PartnerAdventure — did you end up testing the cells individually before committing to the BMS build? And @Davo49, when you say the romance dies — was it the actual performance that disappointed, or more the time investment that made it feel like a false economy?

I'm wondering whether battery management software like the Victron app can even adequately monitor second-life packs, or if you're essentially flying blind on degradation.

Also, has anyone here actually found a reliable second-life supplier in the UK, or is it mostly sourcing from abroad and hoping?

👍 Hazel Megan, Quiet Skipper
Kev Clark
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7 months ago
#2593

Tbh the BMS rabbit hole is real. I went down it with my motorhome setup a couple years back — thought I'd save a fortune on second-life cells. Spent more time debugging cell balancing issues than actually running off the batteries.

The thing nobody mentions is transparency. With new cells you get datasheets. Second-life packs? You're basically reverse-engineering someone else's problem. Had a pack from a Nissan Leaf that looked mint on paper, but the cells had wildly different internal resistance — would never balance properly.

@LiamPalmer's threshold question is spot on. For caravan/motorhome duty, I reckon new LiFePO4 from Fogstar or Renogy sits at a sweet spot now. Yeah, it's more upfront, but you're not bleeding time on troubleshooting when you should be enjoying your setup.

Second-life might work if you're genuinely skilled with BMS tuning and you've got detailed cycle history on the pack. Otherwise, you're trading quid for headaches.

👍 😂 OddJobBob58, Lazy Wanderer, Shaun
Relay Nomad
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7 months ago
#2633

The BMS complexity is exactly where I got caught out with my cabin setup. Spent a fortune on a Victron Smartshunt trying to make sense of mismatched cell voltages from a Tesla module I'd sourced cheaply. The cells themselves were fine, but the pack had internal inconsistencies you can't really know until you've got them on a proper analyser.

Where second-life might pencil out: if you're buying from a reputable breaker who's already done the forensics, and the cells are from a controlled environment (vehicle fleet, not accident-damaged stock). Even then, you're looking at £2-3k minimum for a decent BMS that won't give you grief at 2am.

For a narrowboat especially, @ExPostie86, the space constraints mean you can't easily balance things out with thermal management. New Fogstar or Renogy packs are getting cheaper yearly — the sweet spot's probably shifted away from salvage unless you've got serious engineering time to burn.

The romantic version of this hobby gets expensive fast.

😂 Paddy72, Kangoo Build
Crafter Solar
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6 months ago
#2748

The BMS nightmare is real, but I'd push back slightly on the blanket dismissal. I've got second-life A123 cells in my setup—proper industrial grade, not nissan leaf dregs—and the difference is night and day. You need to know what you're buying.

The issue @KevClark and @RelayNomad hit is chasing bargain basement packs where the cell history is unknown. That's where costs spiral. If you can source cells with actual datasheet pedigree and SOH documentation, a simple LiFePO4 BMS (even a basic JBD) handles them fine.

What I'd actually recommend: work backwards from your Victron ecosystem. A Smartshunt paired with a proper LiFePO4 BMS (Orion BMS2 if you've got the budget) cuts the guesswork massively. Yes, you'll spend £800-1200 on management, but that's still less than a new 10kWh pack from Fogstar or similar.

For a narrowboat though, @ExPostie86? Honestly, new LiFePO

🤗 Somerset Cruiser
Taffy62
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6 months ago
#2784

I'm with @CrafterSolar on this one — blanket dismissal isn't quite fair, but context matters enormously.

The real question is: which second-life pack? Nissan Leaf modules? Brilliant if you can get them. Tesla packs? Nightmare geometry. Random sourced cells? Russian roulette.

I've got a mixed setup here — some repurposed Renogy LiFePO4 cells alongside proper new batteries. The second-life stuff works fine because I knew exactly what I was getting and could match it to a straightforward Orion BMS. No clever multi-stage balancing, no firmware guessing games.

Where it goes wrong is when people try to Frankenstein three different cell chemistries together and expect a single BMS to sort it. That's when you end up spending £2k on Victron gear just to monitor something that cost £800.

If you're genuinely sourcing from a known pack (Nissan, Hyundai Kona), have the datasheet, and your use case is simple, it can work. Otherwise you're paying in time and

👍 Keith Walker
Wonky Mender
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6 months ago
#2812

The real quest is finding cells with known history, innit. I've got a mixed LiFePO4 setup in the van — new Fogstar cells paired with some reclaimed stuff from an old Nissan Leaf module. The difference in consistency is night and day.

Where second-life makes sense: if you've got the time to test and match cells properly, and you're comfortable with a modular BMS approach rather than relying on one controller to handle inconsistency. I use a Victron across matched pairs, keeps things sane.

Where it falls apart: trying to save £500 on 200Ah by grabbing whatever's cheapest. You'll spend that again in BMS grief and rebuilds.

@Taffy62's right about context. For a static setup where you've got space and can monitor closely, it's workable. For mobile (van, boat), I'd lean toward new LFP or proper tested packs. The failure mode of a wonky battery at sea or in the middle of nowhere isn't worth the saving.

👍 LDV Solar
Relay Nomad
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5 months ago
#2890

The history angle @WonkyMender mentions is crucial—and it's where most second-life deals fall apart. You're buying blind half the time, or relying on a seller's word about cycle count and abuse history.

That said, I've had better luck than I expected with culled automotive packs where the pack failed but individual cells are sound. The BMS complexity isn't actually the killer—it's that you're essentially doing forensics on every cell to build one that won't explode your boat electrics.

For a narrowboat specifically, you've got space and weight isn't critical, so honestly the case for new LiFePO4 gets stronger. A Victron Smart BMS on proper cells costs less than the labour of sorting through dodgy second-life stock and building failsafes around unknown degradation.

Where second-life does make sense: stationary cabin batteries where you can bin them if something goes pear-shaped, and you've got time to properly test each cell. Anything mobile—boat, van—I'd rather sleep knowing what I've got.

❤️ Declan Johnson
Spud74
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5 months ago
#2921

@WonkyMender spot on about history. I've looked at second-life packs twice—walked away both times. The BMS nightmares alone aren't worth the saving. Unless you've got direct access to logged data from the original vehicle, you're essentially gambling. New Fogstar or Renogy cells cost more upfront but you get warranty and known degradation curves. For emergency backup especially, that peace of mind matters.

❤️ OffGrid Tina, Kev Hill

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