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LBA10 Balancer with M1 Cells?
I was looking over the documentation for my LBA10 last night and started wondering if it could be used to balance a pack made of M1 cells. The LBA10 works several ways; it cuts off if the pack discharges down to 2.75v (perfect for the M1 cells?), cuts off if any cells goes over 4.3v, and keeps each cell within 0.05v of each other.
So, if I used an M1 specific charger (or do some type of adaptive CC charging so the max voltage doesn't go over 3.6v/cell), I should be able to use this balancer right? Sure, it won't provide the optimum cutoffs, but that's what the charger is supposed to do. But it should keep each cell balanced with respect to each other. Thoughts? BTW: I found out the Hyperion 7i does NOT go into a CV mode with lipos; it's more of an "adaptive" CC. When the voltage reaches 4.2v/cell, it simply constantly adjusts the charge current to keep the voltage to that level. I thought that was kinda interesting. Another thing I found out, the powersupply uses boost mode switching. That probably doesn't mean much to most people, but this charger uses the battery voltage to determine the power supply voltage. The circuitry simply boosts the 12v input to a point a little higher than that. Pretty simple yet effective. :) |
Some balancers will only balance packs where the voltage is 3.3v or above. I don't know if this balancer operates that way, but if it doesn't, then it's fine to use on the A123 cells.
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Hmmm, it doesn't really say. It just states the cutoff on discharge, cutoff on charge, and the fact it keeps the cells within 0.05v from each other. I really think it does, because when I plug in my depleted (~3v/cell) emoli pack, it starts to balance them right away.
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Then I guess the answer is yes, it will work :).
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Cool. :dft003:
Now all I need is a charger capable of a 3.6v/cell limit (or do the adaptable CC thing) and the batteries. I may try 6s M1's in my Revo if I can figure out a workable layout. |
There are a number of chargers out that already have the capability to charge A123 cells, include the TME Xtrema, TP-1010C (soon), Schulze chargers (upgraded firmware), Orbit Microlader (I believe), CellPro 4s, and the Astroflight 109 should be getting an upgrade chip soon. Otherwise, the LipoDapter will allow any charger to work :).
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Brian; i am using a Graupner type of thing of these chargers, i can confirm that they are very precise in balancing.
With or without the charging process active, it simple balances them. If your charging voltage stays at the fixed 3.6V i see no problems for using it for balancing. A nice safety feature is that the 4.3V cutoff really cuts the balancer loose from it's charging signal. |
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If you are getting no charger errors, depending on what amperage you are trying to charge at, you might be hitting the 120w limit of the charger. With a 5s pack, you can only charge at 5.71A (assuming cells are at 4.2v/cell). With 4s, you can charge at 7.14A before you hit the 120w limit. Actually the Hyperion can only go up to 7A, so that will really be the limiting factor at 4s. |
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Like I said, the charger will provide the floor and ceiling cutoffs for the pack. The balancer will simply keep each cell equalized with respect to each other. |
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I'd imagine you got an "input voltage too low" message if it was a power supply issue. As the current goes up, the voltage output of the PS will start to fall depending on the build quaility. However, if it does that at a low 2A, that doesn't make sense.
I've also seen "output voltage too low" and haven't really figured out why it does that. From what I could tell, since the circuitry does an adaptive CC charge for lipos, the sensing circuitry is a bit too sensitive and trips the alarm. I did notice about 14mV of 53kHz AC ripple (from the charger's power supply) on the output connectors. I thought maybe the sense circuit was seeing this ripple causing the alarm to trip, so I tried using an inductor and capacitor network to kill the ripple, but it still had the "output voltage too high" error. I just have to manually adjust the current for now until I figure out why it does this. Eventually, I plan on getting a better charger that will do higher cell counts at higher currents, but it is a PITA for now. |
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Well, I did a how-to for modding the PS a while back. Basically, you can do two things; load the 5v and/or 3.3v line with about 1A of current. This helps to stabilize the regualtor circuitry and keeps the 12v more stable.
There might be a small poteniometer somewhere inside. You could tweak that if there is one. Be careful though! Just because there is a pot in there doesn't mean it's for the voltage, it could be for other parts. |
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