Battery charging
Moderator: Moderators
-
AcidRainLiTE
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2006 10:44 pm
Battery charging
I have 6 Nimh AA 1.25V batteries and a 1 hour charger for them that charges 4 at a time. You put each battery in its own individual charging slot for it to charge. I want to permanently wire the 6 batteries in series for a total of 7.5V (I uploaded a diagram: http://hostitwith.us/files/373/battery.bmp ). How do I wire the charger to charge them when they are wired in series? Will it charge them to their full potential?
Thanks.
Thanks.
if you put 3 in parallel, then somehow hooked it to the contacts on the charger for one battery, it should work, and take 3 times as long. so youd have two groups of 3 connected to the two spots for a battery on the charger.
(or four if you have a "fancy" charger... but those do four at once or two groups of two? the point is that as many batterys you need to make a "charging" light go on, you need that many evenly distributed groups connected to the right contacts. they cant be odd numbers like 2 and 4, because the charger would either overcharge one group or not charge the other enough. or just charge into infinity.)
(or four if you have a "fancy" charger... but those do four at once or two groups of two? the point is that as many batterys you need to make a "charging" light go on, you need that many evenly distributed groups connected to the right contacts. they cant be odd numbers like 2 and 4, because the charger would either overcharge one group or not charge the other enough. or just charge into infinity.)

"Linux is only free if your time is worthless"
-
AcidRainLiTE
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2006 10:44 pm
Not to hijack the thread but anyone know where I can find a universal Li-ion charger. I've got a 14.4v Li-ion battery and would like to make use of it, but I don't know if the RadioShack charger will work, it has a built in chip to I guess regulate charging.
It also looks like this http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0000 ... ZZZZZ_.jpg
It also looks like this http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0000 ... ZZZZZ_.jpg
vskid wrote:Nerd = likes school, does all their homework, dies if they don't get 100% on every assignment
Geek = likes technology, dies if the power goes out and his UPS dies too
I am a geek.
acid rain:
well you could buy a charger that can handle a 7.2v pack, or buld you own. its been discussed around here before, with plans. it dosent look that hard.
sparkfist:
http://www.batteryspace.com/index.asp?P ... rodID=1944
what you have is a laptop battery, right? it can easily handle 1.5A, and i wouldnt give it any less. (mine draws 2.3A when charging.) the one thats $5 less will take 3 times as long to charge it.
well you could buy a charger that can handle a 7.2v pack, or buld you own. its been discussed around here before, with plans. it dosent look that hard.
sparkfist:
http://www.batteryspace.com/index.asp?P ... rodID=1944
what you have is a laptop battery, right? it can easily handle 1.5A, and i wouldnt give it any less. (mine draws 2.3A when charging.) the one thats $5 less will take 3 times as long to charge it.

"Linux is only free if your time is worthless"
-
AcidRainLiTE
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2006 10:44 pm
Ok, maybe I will build a charger. I just tested the batteries with my setup and they arn't working properly. They actually are providing 8.2V, is that too much for the psone and psone lcd? When I power it from the batteries, the backlight of the lcd turns on and then it starts flashing and the psone wont boot up. The setup isnt fried or anything because I tested it with the AC power adaptor and it still works fine. Any ideas?
-
AcidRainLiTE
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2006 10:44 pm
-
AcidRainLiTE
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2006 10:44 pm
-
superdeformed
- Portablizer Extraordinaire
- Posts: 298
- Joined: Thu Mar 03, 2005 4:45 pm
-
superdeformed
- Portablizer Extraordinaire
- Posts: 298
- Joined: Thu Mar 03, 2005 4:45 pm