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ex-Gooserider wrote:More of a concern is that if you heat the wire enough, the molten solder will wick up the wire away from the joint, making the wire into a solid, which is then a stress point that is likely to fail at some later point.
ex-Gooserider wrote:More of a concern is that if you heat the wire enough, the molten solder will wick up the wire away from the joint, making the wire into a solid, which is then a stress point that is likely to fail at some later point.
Burgerman wrote:Your lithium pack connects to the 0V and the 24V terminals.
Burgerman wrote:Your "technician" is an idiot.
Honestly thats like asking a vet which is the front and rear of your dog.
Find a competant person before yours hurts himself or you. If he cant tell just by a quick glance at the cables, and he can, then just test with a volt meter. The two that show 24 or 25 volts are it...
snaker wrote:ex-Gooserider wrote:More of a concern is that if you heat the wire enough, the molten solder will wick up the wire away from the joint, making the wire into a solid, which is then a stress point that is likely to fail at some later point.
I think it would never fail if it was soldered + wrapped by an adhesive heatshrink tube. garriew, try to break an terminal that you have soldered to see how solid it is. You might need professional tools to break it
garriew wrote:I'm going to start charging my batteries this weekend. Do I need to number each battery? Any tips?
ADD ON. I was gonna let them sit for a few weeks.expresso wrote:this is just an ADD ON - ? its not going to sit for a few months after you charge to check the discharge rate ?
That looks nice.expresso wrote:http://www.chinafrey.com/enproducts_show.aspx?id=399
i just found these also which i want to make another ADD ON with - 60ah this time to replace the 36ah i no longer have -
Burgerman wrote:Get the data from the graphs for the first few.
Burgerman wrote:Are you going to give it a go?
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