To use regenerative discharge feature I think you have to use a battery powe supply
Burgerman wrote:Charge to 3.600v. And more important than the volts, charge until current falls to a very low level. Like 1/500th to 1000th of C.
Then discharge to 2.9v. Theres still maybe 2% remaining. But dont risk damage to cells for that last bit. READ OFF WHAT CAME OUT. Not what you put back...To use regenerative discharge feature I think you have to use a battery powe supply
Yes...
Your power suppply doesent have anywhere to put that energy. So smoke...
I put it back into my solar battery bank. And the solar inverter is a "grid tie" device, and it puts it back into the wall... Dont ask.
When you say 1/500 to 1000th of C
fishinjunky wrote:My cells have arrived they look great all 3.2vv qr code looks good, no bulging. I'm going to set the charger up an do some charging and cap testing tomorrow.
Burgerman wrote:4
You want it to wait 3 hours in the event it needs it or longer right?
You dont want it to end as soon as its balanced and not fully charged right? So both. 4.
IN the event it never reaches the termination current, you want a 4 or 8 hour CV time limit. Adding too. Once INITIAL charge and balance has completed. That might take longer.
Burgerman wrote:If you ever blow a fuse it is at times when you take maximum amps. I know I can blow 80A fuses in literally the first time I attempt to draw a lot of current. When do I draw the most Amps? I CANT destroy 100A fuses on demand.
So a 125A fuse is definitely adequate and safe. So I always fit 150A fuses to every chair KNOWING that its got at least a 50% extra above what I can do. And I know too that this is a safe thing to do as the fuse is only there to protect the cables. And that the fuse is definitely going to fail before the cables.
In testing, measuring as I abuse the chair PROGRAMMING determines the maximum "pull" or the maximum Amps that the chair can pull from the battery. If your chair is programmed to have 100% turn Acceleration. And has 100% forward Acceleration. And has the motor compensation set to the very highest "jumpy" limit then your chair puts the max possible load onto the battery. If not then you wont get near the high currents that blows fuses. My chairs are all set in the most agressive way humanly possible! Does your chair behave like this? http://www.wheelchairdriver.com/control.mp4
If not then you dont stand any chance of blowing a 100A fuse.
For the sake of being super sure, a 125 or even better a 150A fuse absolutely garantees this will never happen. In the EU most new R-Net chairs COME with 150A fuses.
Only on 3 occasions does max current state occur. I know because I measure these things on many occasions. On MAX acceleration at 100% as in the vid above. When doing a RAPID turn in place on say heavy carpet with rear drive chairs. And when accelerating from zero to max speed when accelerating up a slope at full stick. And only is the programming is set as explained above.
To be absolutely super garanteed that the fuse never blows, fit a 150A one. It is still small enough to do the job of cable protection. And you will never blow this. And its what sunrise now fit anyway. Fit it and forget about it forever.
I think I may do a 150 amp mini anl fuse.
Is the only real difference between a fuse and breaker the convenience of flipping a switch?
Return to Everything Powerchair
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 179 guests