AWP Battery Engineering

Battery Connector Selection for Scissor Lifts and Boom Lifts

In scissor lifts, boom lifts and other aerial work platforms, the battery connector is not only a plug. It affects discharge stability, charger compatibility, BMS communication, service safety, cable routing and rental fleet uptime.

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Quick Answer

Choose the connector around the machine, not only the battery.

The right battery connector for a scissor lift or boom lift should match the equipment voltage platform, continuous traction current, peak motor startup demand, charger current, BMS communication, locking structure, cable exit direction and daily service environment.

For OEM/ODM lithium battery projects, connector selection should be reviewed together with the battery pack, BMS, charger, machine-side mating connector and wiring harness layout before sample production.

Power Circuit Continuous + peak current rating

Match the connector, terminal and cable size to traction load, hydraulic pump demand and short startup peaks.

Charging Circuit Charger current and port logic

Review charger voltage, charge current, charge enable signal and charger-side connector access before sampling.

Signal Circuit CAN / RS485 / interlock

Define signal pinout, shielding, enable logic, wake-up signal and safety interlock separately from high-current wiring.

Fleet Reliability Locking, mating cycles and serviceability

Make sure the connector survives vibration, repeated charging, rental fleet handling and fast service replacement.

Why it matters

AWP connector failures are usually system-level problems

A connector that looks acceptable on the drawing can still fail in the field if cable size, crimp terminals, mating direction, charger behavior or service handling are ignored.

A

Current mismatch

Underrated contacts can overheat when the lift motor, hydraulic pump or drive system demands high startup current.

B

Loose mating

Poor locking, vibration or repeated plugging can create intermittent power loss in rental fleet operation.

C

Charger incompatibility

The charger connector, charge current and charge enable logic must be consistent with the BMS and machine design.

D

Service difficulty

If cables block the battery tray or service cover, technicians may bend, pull or damage the harness during maintenance.

Connector Problem Table

Common connector issues in scissor lift and boom lift lithium battery projects

Problem Typical cause Risk in AWP equipment OEM/ODM prevention point
Connector heating Current rating, terminal crimp or cable size is not matched to real load demand. Power loss, thermal damage, reduced reliability under lifting or driving load. Confirm continuous current, peak startup current, cable size and terminal specification together.
Intermittent shutdown Loose mating, weak locking, vibration or poor strain relief. Unexpected battery cut-off during movement, platform operation or rental fleet use. Use a connector with reliable locking, suitable mating cycles and protected cable routing.
Charging failure Charger connector, charge current or charge enable signal does not match the BMS. Battery cannot charge, charger reports fault or BMS blocks charging. Review charger connector, charging curve, charge current, interlock and BMS settings before sampling.
Communication fault CAN / RS485 wiring, shielding, pinout or connector separation is not designed correctly. Machine display error, SOC reading issue, charger communication fault or diagnostic difficulty. Separate power and signal logic clearly, define pinout and validate communication under vibration.
Service damage Connector is placed where technicians must pull cables or remove the battery at an awkward angle. Damaged terminals, broken locking tabs or repeated harness repairs. Design service access, cable bend radius and connector position around the real battery compartment.
Electrical Selection

Start with voltage, continuous current and peak startup current

AWP battery connectors should be selected from the real machine load profile, not from battery capacity alone.

1. Continuous current

Continuous current is the current the connector must safely carry during normal driving, lifting, steering and hydraulic operation. It should be reviewed together with cable gauge, contact resistance, ambient temperature and enclosure airflow.

  • Confirm the expected traction and hydraulic load current.
  • Check whether the connector current rating is based on ideal test conditions.
  • Review cable size and terminal crimp quality together with the connector.

2. Peak startup current

Scissor lifts and boom lifts can create short current peaks during motor startup, steering, lifting or simultaneous movement. The connector, terminal and cable assembly should tolerate these peaks without excessive temperature rise or voltage drop.

  • Confirm peak current duration, not only the maximum number.
  • Match BMS discharge protection settings with real machine startup demand.
  • Validate the connector under repeated startup and lifting cycles.

3. Voltage platform

The connector must match the equipment voltage platform and insulation requirements. Common AWP lithium battery systems may use 24V, 48V or higher custom configurations depending on the machine architecture.

  • Confirm nominal voltage and maximum charging voltage.
  • Check creepage, clearance and insulation requirements.
  • Avoid using a connector only because it fits mechanically.

4. Charger current

The charger connector may be separate from the main discharge connector or integrated into a combined interface. In both cases, charge current, charger pinout and BMS charge protection must be reviewed together.

  • Confirm charge current and charging curve.
  • Define charger positive, charger negative, temperature, enable or interlock pins if required.
  • Make sure the charger connector is easy to access without exposing the battery harness to damage.
For lithium replacement projects, the original lead-acid connector may not be suitable for the new LiFePO4 battery pack if the BMS, charger, machine-side wiring or service method changes.
Connector Types

Power, charging and signal connectors should be defined separately

Connector area Main function Key selection points Common project mistakes
Main power connector Connects battery discharge output to the machine-side power system. Current rating, voltage rating, locking structure, terminal size, cable gauge, polarity protection, strain relief. Selecting by appearance or old lead-acid connector style without checking lithium peak current and BMS limits.
Charger connector Connects the battery pack to onboard or offboard charger. Charge current, charger voltage, connector accessibility, charge enable signal, anti-misplug design. Choosing the battery first and leaving charger connector matching until after sample production.
Signal connector Supports CAN, RS485, enable, wake-up, temperature, SOC display or diagnostic signals. Pinout, shielding, contact stability, waterproofing level, separation from high-current cables. Mixing power and signal wiring without a clear pin definition or service label strategy.
Safety interlock connector Provides lockout, enable, charger interlock or service protection logic where the machine requires it. Machine control logic, BMS input/output, service sequence, connector mating detection. Assuming the battery can be treated as a simple two-wire power source.
Machine-side mating connector Ensures the battery pack can connect reliably with the equipment harness. Mating direction, terminal compatibility, cable routing, retention force, spare part availability. Reviewing only the battery-side connector while ignoring the vehicle-side harness and connector condition.
Mechanical Reliability

Locking structure, mating cycles and cable routing decide field reliability

In rental fleets, a connector may be plugged, unplugged, cleaned, charged and serviced many times by different technicians. Mechanical reliability is just as important as electrical rating.

Locking and anti-loosening design

AWP machines experience vibration, shock, lifting movement and transport handling. A connector should not loosen because of repeated vibration or service movement.

  • Use a positive locking structure where required.
  • Check whether the connector can be fully seated in the battery compartment.
  • Confirm that the locking tab is accessible but protected from accidental release.

Cable size and bend radius

High-current cables require enough space for safe bend radius and strain relief. If the cable exits in the wrong direction, it can block battery installation or place stress on the terminals.

  • Confirm cable gauge according to current and routing length.
  • Avoid sharp bends at the connector outlet.
  • Protect cable exits with glands, grommets or bracket support where needed.

Mating cycles

A connector used in a rental fleet may face more plugging cycles than a connector used in a fixed industrial cabinet. The mating cycle rating should match the maintenance and charging method.

  • Confirm whether the battery is removed frequently.
  • Review charger plugging frequency.
  • Consider spare connector availability for fleet maintenance teams.

Serviceability

Technicians should be able to disconnect, inspect and reconnect the battery without pulling the harness or removing unrelated machine parts.

  • Keep connector access visible after battery installation.
  • Use clear cable routing and practical harness fixing points.
  • Design the battery connector position around the actual tray, rails and service cover.
BMS And Charger Relationship

The connector must support the battery control logic

A LiFePO4 battery pack for scissor lifts and boom lifts is not only a cell box. The connector system must support the BMS, charger and machine control architecture.

System item Connector-related question Why it matters
BMS discharge protection Can the connector and cable assembly handle the machine’s startup and working current? If the connector is underrated or voltage drop is high, the machine may trigger protection or lose power.
BMS charge protection Does the charger connector match BMS charge current, temperature protection and charge enable logic? Charging problems often appear when connector pinout and charger behavior are not reviewed together.
CAN / RS485 communication Are signal pins, shielding, grounding and protocol wiring clearly separated from high-current cables? Communication instability can affect SOC display, charger communication and machine diagnostics.
Safety interlock Does the equipment require enable, wake-up, charger lockout or connector mating detection? Interlock logic helps prevent unsafe operation, misconnection or charging conflicts where the machine design requires it.
Fleet diagnostics Can technicians inspect, test and replace connector components without damaging the battery harness? Good service access reduces downtime and repeated repair cost in rental fleets.
If the equipment uses CAN or RS485 communication, the signal connector design should be reviewed together with the BMS protocol, charger requirements and machine-side controller interface.
TE Connector Support

Connector selection support through Wuhan Changlong’s TE resources

Chalongfly is part of Wuhan Changlong, a Tier-1 distributor of TE Connectivity in China. Through Wuhan Changlong’s TE Connectivity Tier-1 distributor qualification in China, Chalongfly can support TE connector selection, sourcing coordination, machine-side mating connector review, terminal matching, cable size review and battery wiring harness integration for OEM/ODM battery projects.

This support is especially useful when a project needs a battery-side connector, vehicle-side mating connector, charger connector, signal connector and complete battery wiring harness to work as one reliable system.

What can be reviewed

  • Power connector current and voltage rating
  • Machine-side mating connector compatibility
  • Terminal, crimp and cable size matching
  • Charger connector and charge interlock wiring
  • CAN / RS485 signal connector and pinout review
  • Battery wiring harness routing and serviceability
Project Information

Information to provide before connector selection

The fastest way to avoid connector rework is to provide the machine-side electrical and mechanical information before battery pack sampling.

Information needed Examples How it helps connector selection
Voltage platform 24V, 48V, 72V or custom pack voltage. Defines connector voltage rating, insulation requirement and charger voltage.
Load current Continuous current, peak startup current and peak duration. Defines power contact size, cable gauge and thermal margin.
Charger specification Onboard or offboard charger, voltage, current, connector type and charging curve. Prevents charger connector mismatch and BMS charging faults.
Machine-side connector Existing mating connector photo, drawing, part number or sample. Helps confirm mating compatibility, terminal matching and replacement feasibility.
Communication requirement CAN, RS485, SOC display, charger communication, enable signal or diagnostic pins. Defines signal connector pinout and separation from high-current wiring.
Battery compartment layout Tray size, cable exit direction, service cover, mounting rails and clearance. Ensures connector position, cable routing and service access are practical.
Fleet usage condition Rental fleet, outdoor use, frequent charging, vibration, washing or dust exposure. Helps select locking, sealing, strain relief and mating cycle requirements.
Validation Checklist

Connector validation before mass production

1

Electrical load test

Validate continuous current, peak current, voltage drop and temperature rise under realistic lift and drive cycles.

2

Charging test

Confirm charger connector, charge current, BMS charging protection, temperature response and charge completion behavior.

3

Communication test

Verify CAN / RS485 wiring, SOC data, charger communication and diagnostic stability during operation.

4

Vibration and movement test

Check connector locking, harness fixing, cable strain relief and intermittent contact under vibration.

5

Service access test

Make sure technicians can connect, disconnect and inspect the battery safely without pulling cables.

6

Fleet maintenance review

Confirm spare connectors, replacement method, labels and inspection process for rental fleet teams.

Need connector, harness and battery pack review for your AWP project?

Share your voltage platform, current requirement, charger specification, machine-side connector photo or drawing, communication requirement and battery compartment layout. Chalongfly can help review the connector system together with the LiFePO4 battery pack, BMS and wiring harness.

Request an OEM/ODM Connector Review
FAQ

Battery connector selection for scissor lifts and boom lifts

What is the most important factor when selecting a battery connector for scissor lifts?

The most important factor is matching the connector to the real machine load profile, including continuous current, peak startup current, voltage platform, cable size and terminal quality. A connector should not be selected by appearance alone.

Should the charger connector be selected separately from the discharge connector?

In many projects, yes. The charger connector should be reviewed according to charger voltage, charger current, charging curve, BMS charge protection and any enable or interlock signal required by the machine or charger.

Do AWP lithium battery packs need CAN or RS485 signal connectors?

It depends on the equipment architecture. If the machine, charger or display needs SOC data, fault information, charger communication or diagnostic communication, the battery pack may need CAN, RS485 or other signal wiring through a dedicated signal connector.

Why is the machine-side mating connector important?

The battery-side connector must mate reliably with the machine-side harness. If the mating connector, terminals, pinout, cable size or locking structure are not compatible, the battery may face overheating, intermittent shutdown, charging failure or service problems.

Can Chalongfly support TE connector selection for AWP battery projects?

Yes. Chalongfly is part of Wuhan Changlong, a Tier-1 distributor of TE Connectivity in China. Through Wuhan Changlong’s TE Connectivity Tier-1 distributor qualification in China, Chalongfly can support TE connector selection, sourcing coordination, machine-side mating connector review, terminal matching, cable size review and battery wiring harness integration.

What information should an OEM/ODM customer provide before connector selection?

An OEM/ODM customer should provide the battery voltage, continuous and peak current, charger specification, machine-side connector information, communication requirement, battery compartment layout, cable routing direction and fleet usage condition.

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