Hi Abel,
Thanks for the link; I'll try to recap.
1) For Flooded lead-acid batteries, a single charger may be used without balancing by using an equalizing charge. While properly performed equalization charges will slightly reduce the cycle life of an individual battery, it is a cheap and effective way to keep floodeds working properly in an EV. A balancer can extend the cycle life and effective range of floodeds.
2) For AGM and most Gel batteries, a single charger may be used, but will need a balancer. In smaller strings with very well made Gel batteries (such as in my Force), you can get away with omitting the balancer (although a balancer would still help extend cycle life and effective range).
3) For Lithium Ion batteries, a balancing system is required.
The article you mentioned recommends individual chargers for Ebikes and Escooters as a more economical choice than a balancer, which is true.
However, using individual chargers instead of a balancer is not as good as a balancer.
BattEQ & PowerCheq balance during discharge and while idle. Balancing during discharge helps extend effective range and reduces the depth of discharge percentage used on the weakest battery for any given trip.
One important point is that individual 6V or 12V chargers cannot be hooked directly up to a 144V or 156V battery pack. You have to first disconnect the batteries from the string to use your 12 to 26 chargers that you have in your garage. For convenience, and for many of the reasons outlined earlier, a single charger is best in most cases.
Todd Martin