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#61
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On Thursday, July 26, 2018 at 10:10:25 AM UTC-7, Dan Marotta wrote:
Right on, Mark. As a former jet jockey, myself, I prefer simplicity and fewer switches.Â* And, whereas one big battery would be nice (forgetting single point failures), space quickly becomes an issue.Â* It's much easier to locate two or more smaller batteries around the ship than finding a place for a big one.Â* One of my friends removed the nose ballast from his glider and replaced it with an SLA battery.Â* A much better use of lead, don'tcha think? ...And if you want more switches, go to an air museum and take a look in the cockpit of a MiG-21... On 7/25/2018 8:55 PM, wrote: There's a lot to be said for reducing component count. Yes, there is a definite charm to single point-of-failure systems. But charm don't count when the failure occurs and you are out of backups and ideas. -- Dan, 5J I always thought the Migs looked best while on fire! |
#62
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On 07/26/2018 12:34 PM, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
On Thursday, July 26, 2018 at 10:10:25 AM UTC-7, Dan Marotta wrote: Right on, Mark. As a former jet jockey, myself, I prefer simplicity and fewer switches.Â* And, whereas one big battery would be nice (forgetting single point failures), space quickly becomes an issue.Â* It's much easier to locate two or more smaller batteries around the ship than finding a place for a big one.Â* One of my friends removed the nose ballast from his glider and replaced it with an SLA battery.Â* A much better use of lead, don'tcha think? ...And if you want more switches, go to an air museum and take a look in the cockpit of a MiG-21... On 7/25/2018 8:55 PM, wrote: There's a lot to be said for reducing component count. Yes, there is a definite charm to single point-of-failure systems. But charm don't count when the failure occurs and you are out of backups and ideas. I got an idea! How about you keep flying the A/C? Do you fly a glider that crashes if you lose the panel? In 40 years of flying with a single battery for the avionics, I've never lost the panel. Absolutely could happen. Not catastrophic if it does. The reality is all the solutions proposed have single points of failure. If you can't handle an occasional failure, maybe find a different hobby? |
#63
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On Thursday, July 26, 2018 at 3:42:56 PM UTC-7, kinsell wrote:
On 07/26/2018 12:34 PM, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote: On Thursday, July 26, 2018 at 10:10:25 AM UTC-7, Dan Marotta wrote: Right on, Mark. As a former jet jockey, myself, I prefer simplicity and fewer switches.Â* And, whereas one big battery would be nice (forgetting single point failures), space quickly becomes an issue.Â* It's much easier to locate two or more smaller batteries around the ship than finding a place for a big one.Â* One of my friends removed the nose ballast from his glider and replaced it with an SLA battery.Â* A much better use of lead, don'tcha think? ...And if you want more switches, go to an air museum and take a look in the cockpit of a MiG-21... On 7/25/2018 8:55 PM, wrote: There's a lot to be said for reducing component count. Yes, there is a definite charm to single point-of-failure systems. But charm don't count when the failure occurs and you are out of backups and ideas. I got an idea! How about you keep flying the A/C? Do you fly a glider that crashes if you lose the panel? In 40 years of flying with a single battery for the avionics, I've never lost the panel. Absolutely could happen. Not catastrophic if it does. The reality is all the solutions proposed have single points of failure. If you can't handle an occasional failure, maybe find a different hobby? Early on when I was more careless about checking on the health of my battery, I have had electrical failures while flying. Since then I have only been inconvenienced a few times on the ground when my batteries were incapable of starting the engine. That said, having a backup is not a bad idea. Especially for my new glider where the primary flight display is electronic. Even then, I could still fly the glider by visual reference only. Tom |
#64
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
Let's get something straight. I am NOT going to bail out if I lose the battery, OK? But IF the panel goes out when I am 100 miles away from the home 'drome, and it's getting late in the day, I don't necessarily need the added hassle of not having my moving map, electronic vario and instruments, my transponder, radio and all those helpful little devices.
We enjoy the benefits of many technologies on cross-country flights. It's not to say that we HAVE to depend on them, but we use them to our advantage much of the time. When I am way out of simple glide ratio of the field, I like to have some information about the wind, along with things like communication and traffic avoidance. If I was a "twirly bird," screwing around the airport no farther away than a 20:1 glide, I wouldn't care. But with the sort of flying I prefer, I will not depend on a single power source. And, yes, I had a failure earlier this year due to a poor ground connection on one battery. But I switched to number two, flew two more hours and tightened the screw on the ring terminal when I got back. My own fault for not securing the connection in the first place, BUT!... I had a backup. And another after that. |
#65
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
Talking about backup batteries, I sometimes carry a portable USB "power bank" as a backup power source for my flight computer (Nook), in case of problems with the main glider battery, 12v-5V converter, or the associated cabling. I found one of the rare models with a real (slide) on-off switch - the far more common ones with a pushbutton seem to turn themselves off whenever the Nook isn't drawing enough current.
So, unlike the LiFePO4 batteries discussed in this thread, this is a lithium-polymer battery, a less stable chemistry, albeit a lot smaller (about 2-3AH at 5V). Is it safe enough to carry in the cockpit? Before you reflexively say "no", remember that you are (probably) carrying at least one such battery, in your cellphone. There's also one inside the Nook, and any other tablets people use in the cockpit. And inside some varios, Portable powerFlarm, who knows what else - almost anything that is rechargeable these days. |
#66
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
I use a cheap android phone with xcsoar, kept in the side pocket, fully charged. Powered off it can be going in a minute, and using its own GPS.
I have a mechanical Winter as vario backup. You dont get to go solo here without the ability to do a circuit and land with all instruments covered. Losing power would little to no inconvenience. A truly independent backup that costs less than $100. |
#67
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On Friday, July 27, 2018 at 4:21:41 AM UTC-4, Charlie Quebec wrote:
I use a cheap android phone with xcsoar, kept in the side pocket, fully charged. Powered off it can be going in a minute, and using its own GPS. I have a mechanical Winter as vario backup. You dont get to go solo here without the ability to do a circuit and land with all instruments covered. Losing power would little to no inconvenience. A truly independent backup that costs less than $100. I have a mechanical variometer and a chart. They have gotten me home when needed for more than 40 years. I expect they would again albeit without a flight log. That said the only power issue I've had was due to a very low primary battery and a backup that wasn't charged as I thought. I turned everything off except the ClearNav and got around OK. FWIW UH |
#68
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On Friday, July 27, 2018 at 1:21:41 AM UTC-7, Charlie Quebec wrote:
I use a cheap android phone with xcsoar, kept in the side pocket, fully charged. Powered off it can be going in a minute, and using its own GPS. I have a mechanical Winter as vario backup. You dont get to go solo here without the ability to do a circuit and land with all instruments covered. Losing power would little to no inconvenience. A truly independent backup that costs less than $100. I have a LxNav S3 with the UPS battery pack, which according to specs should give me 8 hours of vario with audio should I lose ship's main bus, and all those pretty glass instruments. Coupled with a JSW, Super Class, wiz wheel it is just like my first 300 hours of xc flying before I purchased the most modern flight computer made, at the time, the B100. I also have a real sectional(s) for the area I fly, and iGlide loaded on a phone zipped into my pants on flight mode. |
#69
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On 07/25/2018 08:44 PM, kinsell wrote:
On 07/24/2018 08:16 PM, Craig Funston wrote: On Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at 2:22:09 PM UTC-7, wrote: On Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at 12:05:18 PM UTC-4, OHM Ω http://aviation.derosaweb.net wrote: On Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at 9:31:44 AM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote: In my last experimental glider I used two rather stout SPST toggle switches to control my two LiFePO4 batteries.Â* At some point of the flight I would switch the second battery on and then switch the first battery off.Â* I don't think it was really necessary given the longevity of these batteries compared with the SLAs that I used previously, I simply switched about half way through the flight so that both batteries would get some use.Â* I like John's idea with the MOSFETs. On 7/23/2018 10:43 PM, Andy Blackburn wrote: On Wednesday, June 20, 2018 at 6:27:33 AM UTC-7, OHM Ω http://aviation.derosaweb.net wrote: Andy, I have used the ideal diodes mentioned by Shaun McLaughlin (http://re-voltage.eu/ US$27 each) as I was given a pair to test with.Â* They do what they say with minuscule voltage drops across them.Â*Â* Full disclosure, I am currently using two 1N5821 Schottky diodes in my panel right now (page 74 of my presentation) - small, simple, cheap, plentiful, robust, and easy to mount. That being said - the availability of inexpensive ideal diodes has exploded in recent years mainly for use in systems like solar panel arrays.Â* See https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_fro...es%29&_sacat=0. I also like the increasing range of mounting styles available allowing for placement options behind our increasingly cramped panels. John (OHM), Yup, I have one of Shaun's (on your recommendation) and some of the anti-revere-irrigation ones. I haven't installed either. My current install uses the Schleicher rotary switch to select: Battery 1, Battery 2, Battery 1+2 (through diodes), Battery 3 (tail). I use a bank of capacitors connected through a power resistor to energize the circuit when the switch is between batteries. If I had to do it again I would use ideal diodes (though as others have mentioned this is really not nearly a necessary with LiFePO4 batteries since they go through voltages below 11v quite quickly on my battery tester). I would also separate the batteries to individual switches to eliminate the switch as a single point of failure. Andy Blackburn 9B -- Dan, 5J Dan - Do you have diodes in this circuit to prevent cross-charging of the batteries? I will repeat something I said above that (without diodes) putting the batteries in parallel can cause a large current to flow from the "high" battery to the "low" battery.Â* Effectively one battery is charging the other. For dumb SLA batteries this will almost certainly blow the fuse on your batteries (you do have a fuse right at your battery's positive terminal, right??). On lithium batteries, which probably have intelligent current limiting electronics inside, this should not be an issue.Â* But notice the words "probably" and "should". YMMV.Â* Be careful out there. - John OHM Ω How much current do you project when switching from a low LiFe at 12.4 volts(pretty much done) to high at 13.7? I have been doing this switching with SLA batteries for 25 years. Switch new one on- switch old off a second or two later. Have not blown up anything yet. UH Plus one. KISS principle. Two switches and two fuses should work fine, certainly an improvement over some of the Rube Goldberg solutions proposed here. But two batteries, two fuses, and two Schottky diodes would be an improvement.Â* Perfect for everyone except jet jockeys who want more switches to flip. Finally, one properly sized battery with a fuse is probably the best solution, half the number of BMS boards to blow up.Â* Can't get much simpler than that.Â* There's a lot to be said for reducing component count. Speaking of losing the panel, Garret Willat just posted a video on FB of flying in the Czech Republic with no avionics power, which also took out his engine controller. Did have a paper map and mechanical vario. |
#70
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A complicated question about LiFePO4 batteries, - and switching.
On Friday, July 27, 2018 at 8:24:30 AM UTC-7, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
On Friday, July 27, 2018 at 1:21:41 AM UTC-7, Charlie Quebec wrote: I use a cheap android phone with xcsoar, kept in the side pocket, fully charged. Powered off it can be going in a minute, and using its own GPS. I have a mechanical Winter as vario backup. You dont get to go solo here without the ability to do a circuit and land with all instruments covered.. Losing power would little to no inconvenience. A truly independent backup that costs less than $100. I have a LxNav S3 with the UPS battery pack, which according to specs should give me 8 hours of vario with audio should I lose ship's main bus, and all those pretty glass instruments. Coupled with a JSW, Super Class, wiz wheel it is just like my first 300 hours of xc flying before I purchased the most modern flight computer made, at the time, the B100. I also have a real sectional(s) for the area I fly, and iGlide loaded on a phone zipped into my pants on flight mode. I'm using an iPhone X with iGlide as the primary tactical display. If the avionics battery and everything connected to it fries, iGlide simply switches to internal GPS, barometer and battery. It will give a warning about the charge power going out, if you miss that it is seamless enough that you may fly the rest of the day without noticing. The main thing I notice is no more Flarm targets to leech from. On the other hand, with a well done installation the chances of the whole panel failing should be quite remote. I'v got two independent batteries with two independent supply paths to the power bus - which is the single point of failure but being a solid piece of copper fairly reliable. |
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