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mikepetro

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Posts posted by mikepetro

  1. If you were to create a 40w coil, most attys couldnt dissipate the heat generated by this test. I recommend a power resistor attached to a heatsink.

    One, or even better - both of these hooked in parallel, would work nicely.
    http://www.amazon.com/Mounted-Aluminum-Housed-Wirewound-Resistors/dp/B008IDAD76/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1445189600&sr=8-4&keywords=100w+1ohm+resistor


    Here was my approach, a bit overkill for just doing one bat, I wanted to be able test multiple brands.

  2. Yes, read that before, but what, if anything, does the "board" do with this information?

    This blurb from the docs merely states the intent of each field, I am wondering if the board actually uses it, or is it just a design aide.

    I just brought an enclosure to market, and my values are dramatically different than most I have seen. Just trying understand the implications of it.

  3. Really it all depends on "why" you are running the battery analyzer. If you just want to set your own battery once and forget it then go as cheap as you can. Really, the wH calculator comes pretty damn close for casual use. If you are going to be doing it multiple times then you might want to throw a proper heatsink at it.

    I mounted mine to a 3lb aluminum heatsink, but then I want to be able to test multiple battery brands without waiting forever..

    upload_2015-10-1_21-27-34.png

  4. Four resistors spreads out the heatload. One resistor will get pretty hot unless you use low watts. I used 100w and they got warm but you could still hold them comfortably.

    4 resistors in parallel is more akin to the attys we run, but I dont know it makes much difference.

    To me it all about heat dissipation and being able to run the test much faster.

  5. Was wondering what conditions cause the welcome screens to display? Latest 9/3 firmware.

    I have a beta unit, recently it has started displaying the welcome screens in as little as 30 minutes. Its just like the reboot that happens when you load new settings via escribe. I dont recall it doing that before. This seems different than simply sleep after inactivity.

    For what its worth it seems to happen more frequently in cold ambient conditions.

  6. Imagine an atty where you set the wattage based on how strong a hit you wanted, and the temp was a closed loop controller tied into an active juice delivery system. As temp sagged juice flow would slow, as temp reached setpoint juice flow would speed up. Of course this would also require a coil capable of handling the upper range of your wattage while fully saturated.

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