I finally took a voltmeter to the 102 batteries I have sitting in my garage after disassembling the packs. 52 of them are at something above 1.0 volts, as expected. 50 of them, however, are at zero volts. I hooked up one of the zero-volt batteries to my charger, and the charger complained that the connection was broken, and refused to do any charging.
So are these zero-volt batteries completely useless now? Which isn't to say that the other 52 aren't useless in their own way...
Thanks,
Ron
Hey Ron,
I'm not qualified in electronics, nore do I have experience with such heavy cells, so at your own risk!
I work mostly with small digital devices like camcorders, digital cameras and media players, wich happen to have their own little power packs.
Dead batteries (or: declared dead by the charger wich is set to detect a minimum charge to work out how many cells (volts) to charge) are often revived by "forced tickle charging".
Usually I do that with a simple power supply that matches (+10-20%) the voltage. It often works, but dead by age or abuse equals dead forever.
I have a GP fast-charger (for Nimh AA) with a similar problem: a Nimh battery that has too low voltage will not be accepted. I have to slow-charge it first, and then it will go again.
Isn't Mik interested in some of your leftover good cells?
Keep'm charged in he meanwhile, will you?
"doing nothin = doing nothing wrong" is invalid when the subject is environment
First: I am interested in buying some spare cells for my Vectrix! There IS a cheap and easy way to attempt "resurrection" of your dead cells. Telephone me, at 301-439-3873, and I will provide you with options.--Bob Curry, Adelphi, Maryland-USA
Robert M. Curry
Try to parallel a cell with some charge together with a 0V cell and see if the charger accepts that! Once a bit of charge has gone in, the "dead cell" might come back.
You could just charge the cells which have some voltage left and then use them to pre-charge the other cells.
Of course you know this, but make sure you connect positive to positive and negative to negative when you hook the cells together for pre-charging them with each other!
Whenever I have a problem with a AA or AAA NiMH cell being too low voltage for the charger, I just drop a better cell into the charger on top of it for a few seconds, that fixes it almost every time!
.
I usually try the gentle approach with a slow charge, but this might be the wrong procedure for totally empty cells.
Maybe anything works? The approaches seem to differ widely, but generally speaking, you don't know if the cells will come back until you have tried a few things.
Here is something from a PM I received a while back:
It sounds like these particular modules of 11 NiMH cells needed to be charged as whole modules.
On the Vectrix cells, however, you can charge each individual one which might give you more options!
This information may be used entirely at your own risk.
There is always a way if there is no other way!
Thanks for all the advice. We'll see what happens.
By the way, these aren't leftover cells--they're all I got!
Ron