WarrenI
Newly Enlightened
This is for everyone out here who are really into charging NiMHs using smart chargers. I ran into a an issue with my Quest Q2 charger as it did not seem to detect a full charge status from cells that were on the outside ports. The charger kept being in a quick charge mode, which will overcharge the cells. The middle two ports were not having problems. I was charging the cells with the door of the charger open to cool the cells. Well this problem did not happen every time, where sometimes it was OK...
Well, I tried charging the cells with the door closed and the problem did not happen. What I suspected, was that my Q2 had a thermal shutoff instead of the negative delta voltage sensing. The side ports was having the heat of the cells being vented to the side without a cell...
I dropped an e-mail to the Quest people and guess what! They were very responsive and did confirm that the Q2 is a negative delta voltage sensing unit, but what I was experiencing was being caused by the cells being allowed to cool. Their tech support mentioned that the door of the charger should remain closed during charging. The cells need to heat up to a certain level, then the chemical reaction will cause a moderate internal drop in resistance, and trigger the negative delta voltage state...
This is especially true if the charger need several hours to charge a cell. The heat generated may not be too great, so it need to retain the heat to cause the effect. The Ray-o-Vac 1 hour charger may not require the door, since it uses much more current, it will generate much more internal heat to cause the effect. Whatever heat escapes may not make a big difference...
Thanks to Harding Energy (the Quest people) for this informative look at NiMH smart charging...
Well, I tried charging the cells with the door closed and the problem did not happen. What I suspected, was that my Q2 had a thermal shutoff instead of the negative delta voltage sensing. The side ports was having the heat of the cells being vented to the side without a cell...
I dropped an e-mail to the Quest people and guess what! They were very responsive and did confirm that the Q2 is a negative delta voltage sensing unit, but what I was experiencing was being caused by the cells being allowed to cool. Their tech support mentioned that the door of the charger should remain closed during charging. The cells need to heat up to a certain level, then the chemical reaction will cause a moderate internal drop in resistance, and trigger the negative delta voltage state...
This is especially true if the charger need several hours to charge a cell. The heat generated may not be too great, so it need to retain the heat to cause the effect. The Ray-o-Vac 1 hour charger may not require the door, since it uses much more current, it will generate much more internal heat to cause the effect. Whatever heat escapes may not make a big difference...
Thanks to Harding Energy (the Quest people) for this informative look at NiMH smart charging...