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John

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Posts posted by John

  1. If you plug it into a PC near the end of charge, what does it show for voltage and current? Is it charging to 100% and then slowly falling from there, or is it never getting to 100%

    And, just so we're not chasing our tails, you have the battery set to "Maximize Puffs" rather than "Maximize Recharges" correct?

    Because Maximize Recharges shouldn't get to 100%


  2. Well, no, not unless you area having problems with the resistance readings shifting or climbing. 

    Really it is only pictures of devices having problems that are exciting to me. Last I hears Hana has done 450 of them, and as this thread isn't 450 posts long, my hope is that most are working swimmingly. 

  3. I'm not saying it is a bad idea. 

    We always tell people to ask for exactly what they want, because sometimes things they think will be hard and expensive are actually easier or cheaper than they expect. And sometimes something they think will be easy or cheap has some hidden technical snag that makes it not so. That unfortunately is the case here. 

  4. Sorry, I just got back from being out two days (Yesterday was my anniversary)

    The solder joints that seems to just stick out of the connector, can someone get me a picture? It sounds like a cold joint, or not pre-tinning the wire, or no flux. That could cause a bad connection, and the great downfall of all TCR based temperature controlled mods is bad connections. 

    Talking to Hana, it seems like they're improving the build with every batch, so that's promising unless you end up with one from an early batch that's acting up. 

    And I can trade dead ones for reference designs like I offered in another thread. Working my way through the forums now, then I'll take care of the PMs. 

    For the guy who is getting unsteady cell readings, can you measure the cells directly with a multimeter to see if it is the pack, the board or the connections? Might be worth re-seating the main battery connector too in case it just melted out of making good contact due to heat.

  5. I'd use a high temperature hot melt (they make ones specifically for electronics which are awesome, but for a one off hobby build nobody will kick you out of electronics heaven for craft store hot melt) or epoxy. 

    Epoxy has a somewhat higher max working temperature than cyanoacrylate, and is more shock resistant. 

    But in a pinch, CA is a lot better than just letting the pad tear off. 


  6. Here, what I do is tin the wire, add additional solder to the pad, press the wire onto the pad gently and reflow the whole assembly. Goes quickly and doesn't produce a cold joint. 

    But then again, I use an 80 watt temperature controlled solder station. If you have an 8 watt radio shack iron... well...

    http://www.all-spec.com/products/FX-888D.html

    The hakkos are the best bang for the buck among real solder stations. They're not what we use here, but the replacement heater elements for our irons cost more than the whole hakko station.


  7. Partially it will depend on your settings. If you run it at something like 10 watts in battery analyzer, you will get more capacity than if you run it at 200, because some energy will be lost as heat in the battery and wires. 

    It is a good idea to have the battery somewhat broken in before running battery analyzer. 

    My most recent tests with the Fullymax have been in the 9.3 neighborhood, at a nice representative 60 watts of output power. 

  8. You can get pretty close. You're trying to derive a steady state offset (degrees above ambient when the charger is on, but there's no charge current) and then the temperature rise per amp. 

    If you know the room temperature, the first one is just what the device cooled to before it started. The second you can get from the steady state values at the three test charge rates. 

    The time constants are a little trickier, but you could do a regression in excel to get them. Or just figure out how long it took to rise to 63% of the final steady state value. 

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