charging a battery help

guerney

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billyboya

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Post #10. The ebay link is in bold and underlined.




You quoted saneagle's suggestion, see post #16.

there is no link in saneagles post above regarding a link to a multi meter

thats a link to a reference board thing I wont know how to use that or what it does
 

guerney

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there is no link in saneagles post above regarding a link to a multi meter
Where did I say there was? Why not do as he suggests? At this point you don't know if your cheapo multimeter is inaccurate.
 
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billyboya

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Where did I say there was? Why not do as he suggests? At this point you don't know if your cheapo multimeter is inaccurate.
sorry I got a bit confused

Yes I tried that and my meter is inaccuarate, so will check around for a better meter
 

guerney

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sorry I got a bit confused

Yes I tried that and my meter is inaccuarate, so will check around for a better meter
There are oodles of recommendations on this thread, which I also linked in post #10:



As mentioned on that thread, according to the linked reference board, both of these are reasonably accurate. Shop around.


 

billyboya

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There are oodles of recommendations on this thread, which I also linked in post #10:



As mentioned on that thread, according to the linked reference board, both of these are reasonably accurate. Shop around.



they both say this ------- Sorry, this item is no longer available!
 

Nealh

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There is no need to buy another charger as it is working correctly.
Charger plugged in and on , not connected to battery LED green . This is correct as it indicates no current is being asked for.
Connected to battery LED is red, indcating current is being asked for by the BMS.

The end of the charge there is a fine line between the LED going from red to green.
The balancing at the end of the charge process can take up to 2hrs as the final charge current is measly 40mA - 60mA that the BMS asks for.
At the end when one moves the charge jack , one disrupts the power supply connection briefly this causes the LED to go green. It is at the end of the balance process and once there is brief disruption there is to little current draw to tuen red again.

How soon after full charge the charger LED changes from red to green is down to the charger sensitivity of registering the small current being asked for during balance. Some chargers react quicker then others.
 
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saneagle

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sorry I got a bit confused

Yes I tried that and my meter is inaccuarate, so will check around for a better meter
It doesn't matter if it's inaccurate. As long as you know to subtract the same amount from the reading, you'll be OK. The next one you get might be too low.
 

Cadence

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This thread has prompted me to take a look at the mains plugs on my three 42v. (for 36v. battery) chargers, all supplied by Yosepower. They are all fused, but one is a 3amp charger which has a 13amp fuse and the other two are 2 amp chargers with 7.5amp fuses in. I've got some 5 amp fuses in the garage somewhere which I'll be fitting as soon as I can find them.
 

lenny

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This thread has prompted me to take a look at the mains plugs on my three 42v. (for 36v. battery) chargers, all supplied by Yosepower. They are all fused, but one is a 3amp charger which has a 13amp fuse and the other two are 2 amp chargers with 7.5amp fuses in. I've got some 5 amp fuses in the garage somewhere which I'll be fitting as soon as I can find them.
"The fuse did not contain any ballast as is required by the standard and is considered counterfeit. The fuse presents potential hazards of electric shock/fire/explosion when used in a product. "

 

billyboya

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There is no need to buy another charger as it is working correctly.
Charger plugged in and on , not connected to battery LED green . This is correct as it indicates no current is being asked for.
Connected to battery LED is red indcating current is being asked for by the BMS.

The end of the charge there is a fine line between the LED going from red to green.
The balancing at the end of the charge process can take up to 2hrs as the final charge current is measly 40mA - 60mA that the BMS asks for.
At the end when one moves the charge jack , one disrupts the power supply connection briefly this causes the LED to go green. It is at the end of the balance process and once there is brief disruption there is to little current draw to tuen red again.

How soon after full charge the charger LED changes from red to green is down to the charger sensitivity of registering the small current being asked for during balance. Some chargers react quicker then others.
Ok as I don’t think the charger is at fault. Probably a cheap multimeter. I won’t bother getting a new multimeter as will just leave it charging next time even if meter says 42.3v then see if charger go green
 

billyboya

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It doesn't matter if it's inaccurate. As long as you know to subtract the same amount from the reading, you'll be OK. The next one you get might be too low.
Yeah true will stick to what I have see how it goes
 

Nealh

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One may find the fuse is inside the charger if the plug is unfused .
 

saneagle

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One may find the fuse is inside the charger if the plug is unfused .
Good point. These devices are made for world markets, and some countries don't use plugs with fuses, so it would make sense to have the fuse inside the device rather than in the plug, and they fitted a UK plug that had an unused fuse in it.
 

Nealh

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I one is 100% sure it is unfused (unlikely) , then desolder the positve feed wire inside and solder on one of those mini blade fuse holders in line .
 

guerney

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thats a link to a reference board thing I wont know how to use that or what it does
I'm a lover not an electrician... but as I uderstand it, the ickle tiny traffic cop demons which live inside those funny shaped cylinders and boxes etc. on the board, slow down electron pixies travelling at 12V or faster from a power supply into one pair of connectors, to the set voltage speeds scrawled on the board, before they exit from the other pair of connectors on the other side. Those speeds have been measured by elite higher ranked traffic cop demons living in much more expensive and far more accurate measuring gizmos than I can afford. If you shove 12V in one end and don't get the scrawled voltages out, your meter is not accurate. Pixies which refuse to slow down are eaten by demon cops.


One may find the fuse is inside the charger if the plug is unfused .
I may open my charger up to look. How do I test for a fake fuse inside the charger?


I one is 100% sure it is unfused (unlikely) , then desolder the positve feed wire inside and solder on one of those mini blade fuse holders in line .
This Grin dude says blade fuses don't always blow, causing problems. Three in series would increase the odds of one blowing:




do you mean post #10 as that charger is from usa not getting one from abroad
Do BMS Battery ship from China?
 
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