[Test-Equipment] RE: MAHA battery cooker
Howard
Esrman at ameritech.net
Wed Nov 28 23:24:06 EST 2007
And last any lenghth of time.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hsu, Aaron (NBC Universal)" <aaron.hsu at nbcuni.com>
To: "Discussion of Electronic Test Equipment"
<test-equipment at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2007 9:17 PM
Subject: [Test-Equipment] RE: MAHA battery cooker
Primarily because many people don't want to wait 16 hours to charge a
battery <g>. Trickle charging a NiCD or NiMH battery is the absolute best
way to do it, but everybody wants it done *NOW* these days. So, force
800mAh through a battery, watch it heat up, and hope it takes a full charge
and doesn't melt or blow-up in the process. Be thankful it's not a Li-ion
battery - overcharge/overheat these things just a tiny bit and they'll cause
trouble!
I think part of the problem with the auto-detection circuitry in the C777
type chargers is that they don't take battery age and internal resistance
into account. I've noticed that my older NiCD/NiMH batteries will report a
higher voltage when first "analyzed" by the C777. For example, 4 AA NiMH
batteries show as 6.2v when first "analyzed" by the C777. It then thinks
it's a 5-cell 6v (1.2v x 5) pack and will attempt to charge as a 6v pack (@
>7v). When I start the discharge analysis, it cuts out at 5v thinking there
are 5 cells rather than 4. I know the analysis is applying a slight charge
(3 minutes?) to the battery before determining cell count. I'm thinking it
should "rest" the battery without charge for a minute after the analysis
before determining the cell count.
Perhaps what Maha needs to do is to add the ability to "force" the cell
count. The charger should then bulk charge the battery upto 1.4/1.5v per
cell and then put the charger into a trickle charge mode to top off the
battery.
Anyways...
73,
- Aaron, NN6O
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2007 5:27 PM
Subject: Re: [Test-Equipment] MAHA battery cooker
On Wed, 28 Nov 2007, Brooke Clarke wrote:
> I too had that problem with the Maha C777 and sent it back because it was
not
> properly figuring out the number of cells in a pack.
Over the years I have had a real mental problem wondering why battery
charging for NICADS and Nimh batteries had to be so involved. I use a lot
of battery powered devices (mostly 2-way radios) and all I have ever done
is charge them with a power supply and current limiting resistor at the
standard 16 hour charge rate (1/10 the amp/hr rating) and I have never had
a problem. Sometimes, if I want to keep one topped off, I leave it on what
I call "super trickle" which is 1/10 of the standard charge rate.
Bob Roehrig
Aurora University Telecom dept.
broehrig at aurora.edu
K9EUI W9ZGP WD2XSH/19
630-844-4898 fax 630-844-4222
"Nostalgia is a thing of the past"
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