Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris_Elston
You mentioned that 100 Amps might be too harsh and your test at 7 Amps might be too light. But reading the manual on the CBA tester, doesn't it do higher than 7 Amps? I thought I read that it can load up to 40 Amps?
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This is a perfect example of marketing literature stretching the truth a little!
Yes, the CBA III can draw up to 40 Amps of current, but there is also a 100 watt limit. So, up to 40 Amps can be used for a test, but only if the battery being tested is less than 2.5 volts. (40 Amps at 2.5 volts = 100 watts)
For a robot battery (6 cells, 13.2 volts peak, 12.0 volts nominal), 7 Amps is the limit the CBA III will allow. (7 Amps at 13.2 volts = 92.4 watts). There are lots of safety controls in the software to avoid users setting up dangerous tests, and 7 amps is the maximum the software will allow for batteries of the voltage and capacity of our FRC robot batteries.
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Ken Streeter - Team 1519 - Mechanical Mayhem (Milford Area Youth Homeschoolers Enriching Minds)
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