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![]() I’ve been experimenting around with Li-Ion batteries for a few months now, just for fun, and thought I would pass on a few observations that might be interesting. I only experimented with Li-Ions that had a separate printed circuit board incorporated into each cell, and I was not able to ignite these by any combination of overload, short circuit, or charging abnormality. At low levels of abuse including dead shorting, the battery would just shut down, but at some point the PCB would fail and that was the end of the battery. I was able to get a very impressive fire with a lot of smoke by blunt force trauma with the conclusion that in the event of a Li-Ion fire the only survivable option would be to jettison the canopy, and then maybe jump. But I ended up deciding that the odds of a fire were quite low. I flew most of the season with a 3.6 AH (measured, not claimed) battery running either the transponder, the radio, or the PNA and one issue that came up was that some electronics do not like voltage of less than 10.8 volts and the Li-Ion discharge curve (which was 11.8 to 9 volts) is such that they may have viable amperage right down to 9 volts that becomes useless. The radio (Becker) went into survival mode at low voltages while the PNA, running from a 12 volt car adapter, was happy Rather late in the game I discovered that there has been a development in the battery world I hadn’t heard about- more capacity in the same size Lead Acid battery case. My glider came with a UB12100, a 7.5 lb 10 amp hour battery. I was able to swap it up to a UB12120, an 8.5 lb 12 amp hour battery, same size. Now I am able to find the UB12150 battery, again a direct replacement for a very common sailplane battery size, now approaching 10 lbs but with a capacity of 15 AH. My end result is to trade up to the new 15 AH battery and rig the 3.6 AH Li-Ion as a reserve. I seem to pull about .8 amps now running everything off the main battery, but there are back-up batteries in the Vario and the PNA I can switch to, so the plan would be, in the event of a low main battery, to switch to all the back-up batteries and employ a conservation strategy. The Li-Ion battery I ended up with is he http://www.dinodirect.com/Super-9000...YSD-12900.html You can just ignore the claimed 9000 mA rating. At .8 amp draw I get just 3.6 Ah to shut down. Hope it was worth the read, Brian |
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