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#21
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![]() "brianDG303" wrote in message ... More about Glider Batteries: My club's gliders use Gel batteries, probably because they fit the mounts so well, but mostly the private gliders use a battery type with many names, I guess it's an SLA (Sealed Lead Acid) except it's not really sealed. I started to call it an AGM (Acid Glass Matt) which it has, but suddenly it started to be called a VRLA (Valve Regulated Lead Acid). Perhaps I am calling what I use the wrong name. What kind of battery is it, that is widely available form RC shops, 7 amp hour, that does not care which side is mounted up, and has two male slide terminals on it, side by side at one end of the battery? -- Jim in NC |
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On Aug 24, 9:09*pm, "Morgans" wrote:
"brianDG303" wrote in message ... More about Glider Batteries: My club's gliders use Gel batteries, probably because they fit the mounts so well, but mostly the private gliders use a battery type with many names, I guess it's an SLA (Sealed Lead Acid) except it's not really sealed. I started to call it an AGM (Acid Glass Matt) which it has, but suddenly it started to be called a VRLA (Valve Regulated Lead Acid). Perhaps I am calling what I use the wrong name. What kind of battery is it, that is widely available form RC shops, 7 amp hour, that does not care which side is mounted up, and has two male slide terminals on it, side by side at one end of the battery? -- Jim in NC Ah what does the label say? If it is a common type 7Ah lead-acid battery used for powering a starter or glo-plug etc. then today it is likely a VRLA battery. A decade or two ago it was more likely to be a real gel cell battery. Many RC modelers and shops are likely to strictly incorrectly call a VRLA battery a "gel cell" battery. Darryl |
#23
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On Aug 24, 11:39*am, rlovinggood wrote:
On Aug 24, 11:14*am, T8 wrote: One other thing... DO include a fuse or circuit breaker at the battery and do make certain that the connections between the CB and the battery are absolutely as reliable as you can make them (as mentioned on another thread, problems here aren't covered by your CB). *I recommend a 5 amp push to reset CB, provided that you have some place to mount it correctly, teflon insulated aircraft wire of 18ga and Molex or equivalent industrial quality crimp on connectors which are *far* better than consumer grade stuff at your hardware store. *This is a great area to solicit some help if you aren't completely confident in your ability. That's my public service announcement for the day :-). -T8 And Evan, why do we put fuses on the batteries and why do we use aircraft wire? * I wonder if the aircraft in the following report had a fused battery and aircraft wire? http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?e...01X51612&key=1 Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA We put the fuse right at to the battery so there is never a high current running through the rest of the circuitry. Wire short anywhere- fuse blows. This simple protection prevents having to deal with the consequences of many sins, including the PVC insulated wire many production gliders are incorporating. This is a simple and very useful safety enhancement which costs about $3 and takes 20 minutes to accomplish. Unless something falls on the battery terminals, you're pretty well covered. FWIW UH |
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On Aug 24, 9:01*pm, Donald S Brant Jr wrote:
On Aug 24, 11:14*am, T8 wrote: One other thing... DO include a fuse or circuit breaker at the battery and do make certain that the connections between the CB and the battery are absolutely as reliable as you can make them (as mentioned on another thread, problems here aren't covered by your CB). *I recommend a 5 amp push to reset CB, provided that you have some placeer Moxex-type connectors to mount it correctly, teflon insulated aircraft wire of 18ga and Molex or equivalent industrial quality crimp on connectors which are *far* better than consumer grade stuff at your hardware store. *This is a great area to solicit some help if you aren't completely confident in your ability. That's my public service announcement for the day :-). -T8 For any battery connections I highly recommend Anderson Powerpole connectors:http://www.andersonpower.com/product...onnectors.html. They are hermaphorditic (sexless) and are being used as a defacto standard in the Amateur Radio community for battery connections. *This article:http://www.westmountainradio.com/supportrr.htmgives details on their application. *There was a recent article in one of the ham magazines discussing their advantages over Molex-type connectors. *The use of 30-amp size connectors has been suggested as standard due to their rugged construction and low contact resistance. Don. We also use Powerpoles for the same reason. They will take much more abuse than Molex connectors and have virtually no power loss. Can get them at any hobby shop that handles RC cars. Note these are not hobby products, they are industrial connectors. UH |
#25
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On Tue, 24 Aug 2010 18:35:48 -0700, Darryl Ramm wrote:
Its not "omitting" peak-detection, peak detection does not work with lead-acid batteries and so is irrelevant. That was a bad short-hand, menat to cover all chemistries. Lead acid chargers will at least use a constant current bulk mode, then hopefully a constant voltage (or current limited constant voltage) absorption mode and then maybe a float mode. Working out what many of these RC chargers do from their marketing datasheets or manuals can be a challenge hard. Fair comment - and as these things don't have a 'current on' lamp or show the actual current supplied as opposed to the setting. Its quite possible mine just shut off without me noticing. Must see what the Vencon does next time I put an SLA on it. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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On Wed, 25 Aug 2010 00:03:09 -0400, Morgans wrote:
"Martin Gregorie" wrote The only place I've been happy to use untimed chargers is with low capacity NiCds. My favoured approach there is to use a "1% charge rate", i.e. charge at 0.01C, and leave the battery permanently on charge unless I'm flying the model its installed in. NiCds are frequently used as low- maintenance emergency batteries and these are invariably left on charge at the 1% rate for years at a time so they like this treatment. Its really convenient: put the model box back on its rack after a contest or trimming session, open the lid, connect the charger and forget about it until next time you go flying. My strategy for RC NiCads is to charge them with peak charger after flying, then hook them onto a power strip with all of the other factory chargers or equivalent which is powered by a 7 day charger. I set it to come on for 2 hours, once per week. I found a really simple circuit for building a fixed constant current circuit plus 'current flowing' LED indicator from an LM358 dual opamp, an output transistor, a reference Zener and about 4 resistors. I have a small plastic box containing a row of these, one per model, and simply run it off a big old 24v mains supply box I built years ago. The circuit is in the SAMS 'IC OP-AMP Cookbook' but I don't know if thats still in print. This works very well indeed for 4 and 5 cell 50 mAh NiCd batteries. They get fed 900 uA because the dethermaliser timers they drive are always on (no switch, charging socket in the timer faceplate) and these draw 80-300 uA unless they're releasing the tailplane, when they pull 500mA for 15 mS. I have one or two higher rate versions sculling round too for other jobs, such as charging a connection-free 1/2A starter I built, which contains a set of six NiCd C cells. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#27
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On Aug 25, 9:25*am, wrote:
On Aug 24, 9:01*pm, Donald S Brant Jr wrote: On Aug 24, 11:14*am, T8 wrote: One other thing... DO include a fuse or circuit breaker at the battery and do make certain that the connections between the CB and the battery are absolutely as reliable as you can make them (as mentioned on another thread, problems here aren't covered by your CB). *I recommend a 5 amp push to reset CB, provided that you have some placeer Moxex-type connectors to mount it correctly, teflon insulated aircraft wire of 18ga and Molex or equivalent industrial quality crimp on connectors which are *far* better than consumer grade stuff at your hardware store. *This is a great area to solicit some help if you aren't completely confident in your ability. That's my public service announcement for the day :-). -T8 For any battery connections I highly recommend Anderson Powerpole connectors:http://www.andersonpower.com/product...onnectors.html. They are hermaphorditic (sexless) and are being used as a defacto standard in the Amateur Radio community for battery connections. *This article:http://www.westmountainradio.com/sup...tmgivesdetails on their application. *There was a recent article in one of the ham magazines discussing their advantages over Molex-type connectors. *The use of 30-amp size connectors has been suggested as standard due to their rugged construction and low contact resistance. Don. We also use Powerpoles for the same reason. They will take much more abuse than Molex connectors and have virtually no power loss. Can get them at any hobby shop that handles RC cars. Note these are not hobby products, they are industrial connectors. UH I'll have to check these out. FWIW, my Molex recommendation was intended for the spade lug connectors that attach directly to the battery -- these are bullet proof. I agree that the Molex disconnects are a little light duty. -T8 |
#28
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On Aug 25, 7:28*am, T8 wrote:
On Aug 25, 9:25*am, wrote: On Aug 24, 9:01*pm, Donald S Brant Jr wrote: On Aug 24, 11:14*am, T8 wrote: One other thing... DO include a fuse or circuit breaker at the battery and do make certain that the connections between the CB and the battery are absolutely as reliable as you can make them (as mentioned on another thread, problems here aren't covered by your CB). *I recommend a 5 amp push to reset CB, provided that you have some placeer Moxex-type connectors to mount it correctly, teflon insulated aircraft wire of 18ga and Molex or equivalent industrial quality crimp on connectors which are *far* better than consumer grade stuff at your hardware store. *This is a great area to solicit some help if you aren't completely confident in your ability. That's my public service announcement for the day :-). -T8 For any battery connections I highly recommend Anderson Powerpole connectors:http://www.andersonpower.com/product...onnectors.html. They are hermaphorditic (sexless) and are being used as a defacto standard in the Amateur Radio community for battery connections. *This article:http://www.westmountainradio.com/sup...givesdetailson their application. *There was a recent article in one of the ham magazines discussing their advantages over Molex-type connectors. *The use of 30-amp size connectors has been suggested as standard due to their rugged construction and low contact resistance. Don. We also use Powerpoles for the same reason. They will take much more abuse than Molex connectors and have virtually no power loss. Can get them at any hobby shop that handles RC cars. Note these are not hobby products, they are industrial connectors. UH I'll have to check these out. FWIW, my Molex recommendation was intended for the spade lug connectors that attach directly to the battery -- these are bullet proof. *I agree that the Molex disconnects are a little light duty. -T8 And good advice. If you want to be fancy, Molex, 3M or Amp/Tyco FASTON brand fully insulated *nylon jacketed* female 1/4" blade aka "Faston" or "quick connect" connectors. You normally want the standard "non-locking" type, unless you battery terminals have a small hole/depression in them designed to catch the dimple on a locking style connector (most do not). The nylon jacket is more robust then the common PVC style. The really cheap PVC jacketed blade connectors you find in auto parts stores can be pretty bad. Some PVC jackets are so poorly attached they can slide off, move up the wire if damaged slightly when crimping on the connectors. Other sources for all this stuff is DigiKey (www.digikey.com) - search for "quick connects", or Mouser Electronics (www.Mouser.com) although Mouser tend to be more expensive. Buy a bulk bag of them and they'll last forever. Darryl |
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On Aug 25, 7:52*am, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Aug 25, 7:28*am, T8 wrote: On Aug 25, 9:25*am, wrote: On Aug 24, 9:01*pm, Donald S Brant Jr wrote: On Aug 24, 11:14*am, T8 wrote: One other thing... DO include a fuse or circuit breaker at the battery and do make certain that the connections between the CB and the battery are absolutely as reliable as you can make them (as mentioned on another thread, problems here aren't covered by your CB). *I recommend a 5 amp push to reset CB, provided that you have some placeer Moxex-type connectors to mount it correctly, teflon insulated aircraft wire of 18ga and Molex or equivalent industrial quality crimp on connectors which are *far* better than consumer grade stuff at your hardware store. *This is a great area to solicit some help if you aren't completely confident in your ability. That's my public service announcement for the day :-). -T8 For any battery connections I highly recommend Anderson Powerpole connectors:http://www.andersonpower.com/product...onnectors.html. They are hermaphorditic (sexless) and are being used as a defacto standard in the Amateur Radio community for battery connections. *This article:http://www.westmountainradio.com/sup...detailsontheir application. *There was a recent article in one of the ham magazines discussing their advantages over Molex-type connectors. *The use of 30-amp size connectors has been suggested as standard due to their rugged construction and low contact resistance. Don. We also use Powerpoles for the same reason. They will take much more abuse than Molex connectors and have virtually no power loss. Can get them at any hobby shop that handles RC cars. Note these are not hobby products, they are industrial connectors. UH I'll have to check these out. FWIW, my Molex recommendation was intended for the spade lug connectors that attach directly to the battery -- these are bullet proof. *I agree that the Molex disconnects are a little light duty. -T8 And good advice. If you want to be fancy, Molex, 3M or Amp/Tyco FASTON brand fully insulated *nylon jacketed* female 1/4" blade aka "Faston" or "quick connect" connectors. You normally want the standard "non-locking" type, unless you battery terminals have a small hole/depression in them designed to catch the dimple on a locking style *connector (most do not). The nylon jacket is more robust then the common PVC style. The really cheap PVC jacketed blade connectors you find in auto parts stores can be pretty bad. Some PVC jackets are so poorly attached they can slide off, move up the wire if damaged slightly when crimping on the connectors. Other sources for all this stuff is DigiKey (www.digikey.com) - search for "quick connects", or Mouser Electronics (www.Mouser.com) although Mouser tend to be more expensive. Buy a bulk bag of them and they'll last forever. Darryl Darryl , another source of very high quality crimp-on connectors, if you just want to drive to a local store, is electrical supply houses. They stock UL listed (to 600 volts) terminals by companies like Turner & Betts and Panduit. They have to meet a performance spec and they are not cheap, and they are quite good. I share your frustration as everyone in my club has one of those kits they got at Sears or Radio Shack with the bogus tool. The terminals fail over and over so you tend to see that kit come out quite often. Brian |
#30
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On Aug 24, 6:49*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Aug 24, 7:03*am, Grider Pirate wrote: VSLA? A123? Cycling chargers?? *I think this subject should have it's own thread. *Unlike transponders, we almost all need them. Some comments below, in general and picking up a few things in other posts/threads and reposting some things I've said elsewhere recently. Most "smart" chargers are really pretty dumb ...clip... I would add to this informative long post that desulfating chargers are very helpful in extending the life of, and restoring, lead-acid batteries. (Google "battery desulfation" or read http://www.chargingchargers.com/tuto...sulfation.html as an example) Schumacher makes 2 desulfating chargers, available in auto stores or via Internet for about $75. I use their model WM-6000A on my stored automobiles, and have used it to quickly resuscitate my 12-v gel-cell glider batteries, as well as to restore 2 batteries to usable condition this summer after leaving the master on in the trailer for a week. (They were all but shorted out.) VDC Electronics seems to have the broadest line of desulfating chargers. ( http://www.batteryminders.com ) I use their Concorde- specific charger with my Mooney, which is designed for that battery and is temperature compensated. Their desulfating BatteryMinder Plus model 12117 can be had on the web for about $45 plus shipping, and will maintain up to 5 batteries. A summary of their non-aviation-specific chargers is in pdf format at http://www.rvupgrades.info/batterymindermanual.pdf They also make a solar desulfating charger available with either a 5- watt or 15-watt panel My glider has 2 electrical systems, and I mounted 2 15-watt desulfating chargers on the trailer roof, which is very nice. I only wish they would work by moonlight. |
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