|
Posted by Solar Flare on January 29, 2008, 9:03 pm
Please log in for more thread options I maintained a few ni-cad banks years ago. 1.22, 1.33 & 1.44 volts per
cell rings a bell. I think that was nominal, float and equalize
voltages.
You really need a constant current charger as the voltage is a really
nonlinear curve to their charge.
Things I remember
- we used them in outside stations as their cold curve was much better
- they had small capacity per size compared to lead/acid units
- we got rid of them all
- chargers like to "hunt" or oscillate if you try to charge them with
a voltage unit. Touching feedback damping was the key to prevent it.
Most chargers these days have never heard of this adjustment
Have fun.
> Any experts here on large nicads?
>
> I just picked up 45 used SAFT SBM43-2 NiCd "block" batteries. Each
> battery appears to be 2- 43 AH cells with a jumper bar attached
> between the two cells putting them in series electrically. Each
> battery measures 3.4-3.62 volts, which seems on the high side for 2
> cells voltage. According to the technical manual, they should be
> charged at 1.7V/cell max, which would produce 3.4V / battery. Could
> the higher voltage be indicative of batteries near their life end?
> Or were they last charged at too high of a voltage? Or??
>
> Cost - 20 mile drive each way.
>
> http://www.saftbatteries.com//130-Catalogue/PDF/tm_bb_en.pdf
> http://www.saftbatteries.com//130-Catalogue/PDF/com-data_bb_en.pdf
>
|