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Re: Battery Charging Box
basically you would have to wire a current regulator or voltage detector for each battery.
so there isnt really that much of the charger that would be common to all the batteries it is charging. |
Re: Battery Charging Box
Quote:
Actually there are a number of multiple battery charger for all kinds of applications. They generally use a common power supply and then branch out to fedd each battery through it's own charge circuit. You want the charger to constantly check the state of charge the battery vitals and generally even the temperature of the individual batteries. I know that Motorola has eight wide charging stands for walkietalkies. These chargers give indications of the state of charge on each battery and can even flag batteries that are about to die. Some multi chargers are actually computer controlled devices that can produce a series of tests and give printed reports of battery by serial number. |
Re: Battery Charging Box
>>>>
Originally Posted by Venkatesh I have a question for the electrical wizards out there. How would a charging system be properly designed to charge multiple batteries at one? I would think a nicely setup diode layout would prevent one battery trying to charge another, even if there was a chance for something like that. >>>> The proper way to do it is to route a suitable supply through a Unitrode 3906 charge controller, set up with a pass transistor capable of handling the charge current and power dissipation requirements. As noted earlier, you can use a common supply and a separate 3906 and pass transistor for each battery. The 3906 has battery charge status indicators that can be set up on leds. We used two of the exide chargers this year with 50 amp connectors attached. We ran into problems with not enough batteries in the finals, and problems with chargers getting unplugged and students not reading the leds on them carefully. We will address the issue with a multi-battery charging bank design over the summer. It would have to be a custom design using a high power darlington pass transistor, the available unitrode 3906 designs on the web run at lower charge currents. |
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