I've now thoroughly reviewed both PDFs. Let me give you a clear summary.
Yes, both USB charging and battery protection are already covered in your battery architecture — they're part of the self-contained battery pack design you've been developing. Here's the breakdown:
The battery pack includes a full USB-C PD charging system built into the electronics bay at the bottom of the scaffold: ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
- USB-C panel-mount port (IP67, on the side of the battery end cap)
- PD trigger board (ZY12PDN or STUSB4531, ~31×15×4mm) — negotiates 20V from any charger 45W–240W automatically
- Boost converter (XL6019, 20V→42V CC/CV) — steps up to pack charge voltage
- Total electronics fit in ~60×45×25mm, tucked into the electronics bay
The key design point: all electronics live on the battery, not in the frame. You pull the battery out, plug your MacBook charger into the USB-C port on the side, charge on the kitchen table. The frame side is 100% passive — just flat copper pads. ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
A 10S BMS is included in the electronics bay, handling: ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
- Overcurrent, overvoltage, undervoltage protection
- Short-circuit and temperature cutoff
- Cell balancing during charge
- Per-cell fusing was deliberately skipped — at 3.5A per cell in 2P, the BMS alone handles everything adequately
The connector design settled on an elevated pad island + recessed pogo pin dock approach: ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
- Frame side: Elevated flat gold pads on a raised "speed bump" — water sheets off, no pooling
- Battery side: 6-pin pogo block recessed deep inside a dock cavity — finger-safe by geometry (IP2X-style)
- 2 power pins + signal/thermistor/comm pins
Your notes confirm the DT dimensions are not locked down yet, and you've been exploring both round and oval options: ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
| Discussed Size | Context |
|---|---|
| 50mm round | Original spec for 2×2 grid of 21700 cells |
| 55–60mm | Referenced for fitting 21700s with BMS/wiring room |
| 43×59mm oval | The 1-2-1 diamond layout (narrower, taller) |
| ~50×65 (your current thinking) | Wider than the diamond, gives more lateral room |
The 50×65 oval gives you more cross-sectional area than the 43×59 diamond and better lateral stiffness for pedaling loads. The tall axis (65mm) resists braking/vertical loads while the narrow axis (50mm) keeps the frame slim between your knees. Since you're building in aluminum (not steel), you have freedom to specify custom oval tubing from the fabricator. ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
The scaffold cage parameters (currently cagew = 53, cageh = 48 in the OpenSCAD file) would need updating to match whatever oval you settle on. With a 50×65 outer and ~2mm wall, you'd have roughly 46×61mm inner bore — plenty of room for the 2×2 cell grid (~43×43mm footprint) plus wiring channel and air gaps. ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
Bottom line: your electronics stack is already specced and costed at $22–38 total for BMS + USB-C PD + boost converter. The DT oval just needs to be finalized around whatever gives comfortable clearance for the scaffold + 1mm air gap on each side. ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
I now have a very clear picture. The Aventon Soltera OEM pack dimensions are confirmed at 386 × 60 × 72 mm, and the Green Cell 90 × 90 mm cross-section is another data point. This is a really sharp strategic pivot — let me lay it out properly.alibaba+1
The Round-Tube Strategy: Sound Engineering Logic
This is a genuinely good reframe. You're proposing to design the frame around a commodity battery rather than designing a battery around the frame — which inverts your risk profile entirely. Here's the full picture:
What the Aventon Soltera OEM Pack Actually Is
The Alibaba listing confirms: 386 × 60 × 72 mm, 21700 cells, 36V 10Ah (360 Wh), standard BMS with no proprietary handshake. It's one of dozens of functionally identical packs from Chinese OEM houses — the "Aventon Soltera" label is just whatever bike brand ordered that run. The underlying pack is a generic 60 × 72 mm rectangular cross-section intube battery with a round end cap for aesthetic closure.[alibaba]
This is the dominant form factor in the generic OEM intube world. Most packs cluster around 60–90 mm on the wide axis, with a rectangular (not round) cross-section inside a round-ended enclosure. The round covers you're noticing are cosmetic — the battery body itself is rectangular, designed to slide into a D-shaped or oval tube, not a true circle.greencell+1
Standard Cross-Sections in the Generic Market
The Real Unlock: Serviceability + Certification
The strongest argument for your pivot is CE/UN38.3 certification. A generic OEM pack already carries it. Building your own 10S2P scaffold means you become the battery manufacturer for liability purposes under EU regulations — that's a significant compliance burden for a small brand. Sourcing a certified pack transfers that liability to the supplier and simplifies your CE declaration for the whole bike.[alibaba]
The round tube at ~95–100 mm OD is a legitimate trade-off for a trekking, urban, or cargo-influenced frame — less so for an eRoad/eGravel position. If your target is a more upright city/commuter/adventure geometry, a bold large-diameter downtube is actually on-trend (see Specialized Turbo Vado, Canyon Pathlite). If you're targeting road-race aesthetics, it's a harder sell.[cycmotor]
The Round-Tube Strategy: Sound Engineering Logic
This is a genuinely good reframe. You're proposing to design the frame around a commodity battery rather than designing a battery around the frame — which inverts your risk profile entirely. Here's the full picture:
What the Aventon Soltera OEM Pack Actually Is
The Alibaba listing confirms: 386 × 60 × 72 mm, 21700 cells, 36V 10Ah (360 Wh), standard BMS with no proprietary handshake. It's one of dozens of functionally identical packs from Chinese OEM houses — the "Aventon Soltera" label is just whatever bike brand ordered that run. The underlying pack is a generic 60 × 72 mm rectangular cross-section intube battery with a round end cap for aesthetic closure. [alibaba](https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/Aventon-Soltera-Ebike-Frame-Intube-Batteries_1601384124500.html)
This is the dominant form factor in the generic OEM intube world. Most packs cluster around 60–90 mm on the wide axis, with a rectangular (not round) cross-section inside a round-ended enclosure. The round covers you're noticing are cosmetic — the battery body itself is rectangular, designed to slide into a D-shaped or oval tube, not a true circle. greencell
Standard Cross-Sections in the Generic Market
The 60 × 72 mm family (Aventon/HIMO-type) is the slimmest widely available generic. If you round up to fit a true circle, that cross-section demands a minimum ~93 mm diameter tube (diagonal of 60 × 72 = 93.6 mm). That's a large downtube by any road/gravel standard.
Round Tube Sizing Reality
To fit a 60 × 72 mm rectangular pack inside a round tube with clearance for the slide-rail and any tolerance, you'd need:
That's essentially a 100mm OD round downtube — which is larger than most modern gravel/road bike downtubes (typically 40–60 mm OD) and getting into fat-bike or cargo territory. The CycMotor A-65 side-slide system (fits "most bikes") works around this by ejecting sideways rather than end-to-end, which tolerates a narrower tube. [cycmotor](https://www.cycmotor.com/a-65-battery)
The Strategic Trade-off
The Real Unlock: Serviceability + Certification
The strongest argument for your pivot is CE/UN38.3 certification. A generic OEM pack already carries it. Building your own 10S2P scaffold means you become the battery manufacturer for liability purposes under EU regulations — that's a significant compliance burden for a small brand. Sourcing a certified pack transfers that liability to the supplier and simplifies your CE declaration for the whole bike. [alibaba](https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/Aventon-Soltera-Ebike-Frame-Intube-Batteries_1601384124500.html)
The round tube at ~95–100 mm OD is a legitimate trade-off for a trekking, urban, or cargo-influenced frame — less so for an eRoad/eGravel position. If your target is a more upright city/commuter/adventure geometry, a bold large-diameter downtube is actually on-trend (see Specialized Turbo Vado, Canyon Pathlite). If you're targeting road-race aesthetics, it's a harder sell. [cycmotor](https://www.cycmotor.com/a-65-battery)