Answer first: what should a North American battery line include?
A competitive North American battery pack assembly line should combine prismatic cell handling, laser cleaning and welding, insulation and hipot testing, BMS communication checks, final EOL testing, and MES genealogy. The line itself does not receive UL 9540 certification, but it must generate the process records and quality evidence needed for UL 1973 battery certification, UL 9540 ESS certification, customer audits, and utility-scale project approval.
Why North American projects require a different line design
UL documentation starts on the line
UL 1973 and UL 9540 evaluation depends on stable process control. Weld parameters, insulation results, BMS communication logs, and EOL data must be traceable to each pack serial number.
Installers and utilities ask for evidence
Authorities Having Jurisdiction, utilities, and insurance underwriters often request process evidence beyond the final certificate. MES-ready production records reduce audit friction.
Manual rework is expensive
North American labor costs make process escapes costly. Automated EOL testing and recipe-controlled welding reduce rework, warranty exposure, and field failure risk.
Recommended line configuration for North America
| Station | Purpose | North America-specific requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Cell incoming inspection | OCV/IR check, barcode registration, grade confirmation | Cell records must link to pack serial number for customer audit trails |
| Stacking and compression | Cell alignment, compression force control, fixture positioning | Recipe control for 280Ah, 314Ah, and 587Ah LFP cells |
| Laser cleaning | Remove oxide and contamination before busbar welding | Process logs support weld quality validation and customer PPAP-style reviews |
| Laser welding | Busbar and terminal joining with monitored parameters | Weld power, speed, waveform, and alarm records stored per pack |
| Insulation / hipot testing | Detect leakage paths and assembly defects | Required data set for safety documentation and downstream ESS approval |
| BMS and EOL testing | Communication, voltage, resistance, function, and protection checks | Final test report should be exportable for UL and utility customer records |
| MES traceability | Bind cell, station, operator, process, and test records | Supports UL 1973 / UL 9540 documentation workflow and warranty investigations |
Certification-ready data checklist
For North American projects, the line should capture more than pass/fail results. It should generate an evidence chain that can be reviewed by customers, certification bodies, and field-service teams.
- Cell barcode, supplier batch, OCV and IR values
- Compression force and dimensional verification
- Laser cleaning recipe and station status
- Weld power, speed, wobble pattern, and alarm history
- Insulation resistance and hipot test records
- BMS communication, firmware version, and protection checks
- Final EOL report linked to serial number and operator ID
UL-ready does not mean the machine is UL 9540 certified
UL 9540 applies to the complete energy storage system. The assembly line equipment supports certification by creating repeatable manufacturing conditions and traceable quality evidence. For equipment installed in North America, electrical design can be aligned with local requirements and customer specifications during the engineering phase.
Typical project timeline
| Phase | Duration | Key deliverables |
|---|---|---|
| Technical RFQ review | 1-2 weeks | Cell format, pack drawing, capacity target, automation level, layout assumptions |
| Line design and quotation | 2-4 weeks | Process flow, station list, takt-time estimate, utility requirements, budgetary quote |
| Manufacturing | 12-18 weeks | Equipment build, PLC/HMI development, MES interface preparation |
| FAT | 2-4 weeks | Factory acceptance test, sample run, EOL data verification, packing |
| Shipping and installation | 4-6 weeks | Sea freight, site preparation, installation supervision |
| SAT and ramp-up | 4-8 weeks | Site acceptance test, operator training, process tuning, spare-parts handover |
North America vs. general export line requirements
Documentation depth
North American customers typically require stronger technical files: electrical schematics, component lists, EOL reports, safety circuit description, and software version control.
Service planning
Remote diagnostic access, spare-parts kits, training materials, and clear escalation procedures matter more because travel distance and labor cost amplify downtime.
Audit language
Buyers often use automotive-style quality language: PPAP, FMEA, control plan, station capability, Cp/Cpk, and serial-number traceability.
Certification pathway
The manufacturing process should be planned alongside UL 1973, UL 9540, NEC installation review, and customer-specific utility approval requirements.
Planning a BESS or EV battery pack line in North America?
Send your target cell format, pack configuration, annual capacity, and preferred automation level. Huiyao Laser can provide a preliminary station list, layout concept, and certification-ready data checklist for your RFQ review.
Request a North America Line Review