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#1
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Hi,
As an 8-year (or longer) Kitplanes subscriber, and longtime electronics tech (Army Aviation-trained), I read with interest the articles Jim Weir wrote about building your own RG battery charger (Kitplanes: March, April, & May 2004). This looks just like the ticket for my application, but I did have two questions: First, would sealed reghargable lead-acid batteries (such as the Yuasa NPH5-12 12V 5Ah) be an applicable model to recharge with this charger (is a gel-cell a gel-cell a gel-cell, etc.), and what would be the best way to reduce the charging current to the c/100 that is recommended? Secondly, is there an easy way to provide a parts list (with quantity, type, current capacity, and tolerance) for the components in these circuits? These would be a HUGE help! As I still rent from my local FBO, and they have apparently had a few acft returned in the past with dead batteries, they have summarily disabled all of the cig lighter sockets in all of their acft. I fly with a PDA-based GPS which requires a 12V source for power, but only drains 250mA during operation, so I keep a small gel-cell battery in my flight bag with a cig lighter socket pigtailed to the terminals. It works great, but I'm afraid to attach that little battery to my auto batt charger, and don't think a 13.8V wall-wart charger has enough current to push into the battery. The RG Charger in Jim's article looks like the ticket, but I wanted to be sure that I was using the right tool for the job, and needed a shopping list to take to Radio Shack. Thanks. Kevin M. O'Brien Seffner, Florida. |
#2
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![]() "Kevin O'Brien" wrote in message om... which requires a 12V source for power, but only drains 250mA during operation, so I keep a small gel-cell battery in my flight bag with a cig lighter socket pigtailed to the terminals. It works great, but I'm afraid to attach that little battery to my auto batt charger, and don't think a 13.8V wall-wart charger has enough current to push into the battery. The RG Charger in Jim's article looks like the ticket, but I wanted to be sure that I was using the right tool for the job, and needed a shopping list to take to Radio Shack. Thanks. Kevin M. O'Brien Seffner, Florida. Kevin, if you want to charge from a regulated source of similar voltage such as your car battery, the solutions are cheap and easy. Just put a light bulb in series with the battery on the charge cord. The lamp will limit the current but still allow a full charge. Total cost, about $2. Make sure the current does not exceed the recommendations of the battery maker. A 15W lamp (common) allows a little under 1 amp into a discharged cell. |
#3
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FBOs find batteried dead because people leave the master on.
Too tired or distracted to complete a proper shutdown checklist. As for the cig lighter socket, Cessna and the FAA issued an AD years ago to have them disconnected as they presented a fire risk; there was no breaker for the socket. They did allow the owner, if he desired, to put an inline fuse in the line to the socket if he needed it for other things like intercoms and such. Dan |
#4
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![]() Kevin O'Brien wrote: snip As I still rent from my local FBO, and they have apparently had a few acft returned in the past with dead batteries, they have summarily disabled all of the cig lighter sockets in all of their acft. I fly with a PDA-based GPS which requires a 12V source for power, but only drains 250mA during operation, so I keep a small gel-cell battery in my flight bag with a cig lighter socket pigtailed to the terminals. Sort of a non-sequitur to your question, but I always ask this: Do you have a fuse right on the battery? A really easy way to do this is a short jumper with female connectors on both ends. (I've actually soldered two back-to-back and put heat-shrink over them) Slide one end on the battery terminal, the other end to one tab of an automotive fuse. Your former power connection then slides on to the other tab of the fuse. Cheap. Easy. Safe. I had a setup similar to yours for a handheld radio which I would have _sworn_ would not short. It did, though. Caused some smoke, burned through my little custom-sewn denim bag, and gave an enormous shot of adrenaline. Tim "once burned, twice shy" Ward |
#5
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![]() "Kevin O'Brien" wrote in message om... Hi, As I still rent from my local FBO, and they have apparently had a few acft returned in the past with dead batteries, they have summarily disabled all of the cig lighter sockets in all of their acft. I fly with a PDA-based GPS which requires a 12V source for power, but only drains 250mA during operation, so I keep a small gel-cell battery in my flight bag with a cig lighter socket pigtailed to the terminals. It works great, but I'm afraid to attach that little battery to my auto batt charger, and don't think a 13.8V wall-wart charger has enough current to push into the battery. The RG Charger in Jim's article looks like the ticket, but I wanted to be sure that I was using the right tool for the job, and needed a shopping list to take to Radio Shack. While the normal wet type of battery requires up to 15 volts to charge it properly if you use a charger designed for them on a gel-cell it will fry it, had some gel-cell batteries fry for that reason. Be sure that any charger you use on a 12v gel-cell does not exceed the recommended 13.6v. -- .. .. Cheers, Jonathan Lowe, Rallye 880b EI-BFR Thanks. Kevin M. O'Brien Seffner, Florida. |
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