Fire Resistant Charge station |
Adafruit in their fantastic efficiency got me the charger in just a few days. But it took a little longer for the "protected" battery holders to show up from China. Two holders and two surprise sets of jst connectors had me down in the shop melting solder in minutes.
Since I trusted the Adafruit charger it got hooked up first. I think it was a mistake getting a 9v power pack for the charger - when charging the little chip gets quite warm to the touch. The datasheet says the chip is thermally protected and will throttle back on the charging current if it needs to, not what you really want from a charger. So I will dig around in the old phone charger box for the highest current 5v mini plug converter, less voltage, less heat. Actually I do not care how long it takes to charge one of these - I just sit next to the "fire resistant charging station" until the light blinks - about an evenings TV viewing.
It seems that most people use these cells to power flashlights. Some of these flashlights have Cree LED and are driven at one amp plus constant current buck/boost switchers. So having a 2200 mah battery for the hour or two run time you will need for this makes sense However, even though I got a flashlight just to see what it is all about, I will be hooking these up to Arduinos and such which draw milliamps - I suspect that the batters will suffice me for a very long time - even if they are well past their useful life for high power applications.
Comment about Battery safety. The charging part of the process is the most "dangerous". I have read all the articles I could find about exploding Lithium batteries. All of them I find are forced in some way, gimiked cells to cause an unstable situation, direct connection to a 12v car battery to an unprotected pack. These are unusual occurrences.
The thing that simply astonishes me is that people take batteries that have about the energy density of dynamite, that have elaborate safety mechanisms designed to outgas safely if some thing untoward happens. Then they seal it up in a machined high strength aluminum tube without any safety overpressure blow out ports. This is how to make a pipe bomb - not something that will take the abuse that a flashlight will over time. When/if something happens - I will not be surprised, sorrowful and with heartfelt pity, but not surprised.
I an good with the safety built into the cells, and the protection circuits I purchased, I can't make it any safer. These batteries are safe if you don't go around poking them with sharp things or running over them, or something juvenile like shorting them out to just to see what happens, or putting them in high flying aircraft . A little red and black magic marker to make sure I know which end is which, helps a bunch.
So I will use the same care I use with line level circuits / lasers/ gasoline / echant / hypergolic concoctions. I will pay attention to what I am doing, and never hurry. Nothing is so important that it can't wait until you are wider awake, less stressed.......
More interesting details in next post
1 comment:
You' re totally right. Usually those 18650 batteries are very safe, unless someone does something on purpose or stabs them with sharp stuff without attention.
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