Hi,
For single cells I can use some jumpers to connect them to the C9000, but I've got a couple of battery packs of multiple NiCD's and no charger for them. What I do have is a bench power supply with constant voltage/constant current limits that I can use to charge with and I'm often sitting right next to this so I can keep an eye on it.
Obviously I can set a charge limit of 0.1C per cell for NiCD and leave for the recommended 14-16 hours, but can I charge faster by doing something like this:
Decide what the max voltage per cell is fully charged (1.54V ?).
Set Voltage Limit to 1.54 * cells.
Set Current Limit to 1C.
Connect pack.
This should let it charge at up to 1C, but as it approaches the fully charged voltage per cell, the current should drop to 0.
Will this work? Is there a better way?
(Obviously this assumes that all cells are at the same state of charge)
Thanks,
Alan
For single cells I can use some jumpers to connect them to the C9000, but I've got a couple of battery packs of multiple NiCD's and no charger for them. What I do have is a bench power supply with constant voltage/constant current limits that I can use to charge with and I'm often sitting right next to this so I can keep an eye on it.
Obviously I can set a charge limit of 0.1C per cell for NiCD and leave for the recommended 14-16 hours, but can I charge faster by doing something like this:
Decide what the max voltage per cell is fully charged (1.54V ?).
Set Voltage Limit to 1.54 * cells.
Set Current Limit to 1C.
Connect pack.
This should let it charge at up to 1C, but as it approaches the fully charged voltage per cell, the current should drop to 0.
Will this work? Is there a better way?
(Obviously this assumes that all cells are at the same state of charge)
Thanks,
Alan