The vintage batteries thread- Q&A

Brushed, nicad, radios, etc...

Moderators: scr8p, klavy69

newob
Regular Member
Posts: 23
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2012 1:47 am

Re: The vintage batteries thread- Q&A

Post by newob »

Are there any good places to find old NiCD's these days other than ebay? Can they still be bought new I wonder?

User avatar
slotcarrod
Approved Member
Posts: 4415
Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 10:57 pm
Location: Calgary Alberta Canada
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 41 times

Re: The vintage batteries thread- Q&A

Post by slotcarrod »

eBay mostly! You find them in Buy Sell once in a while, once you gain access! :wink:

User avatar
vegasjetta
Regular Member
Posts: 14
Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2012 2:52 pm
Location: Portland Maine

Re: The vintage batteries thread- Q&A

Post by vegasjetta »

Wait, are these old batteries still usable? I am stupid when it comes to this stuff. I have 6 sets of these sitting in my garage. Can they be revived?
If so, does anyone want them? I won't use them for anything, would you guys into the hardcore vintage stuff want them for display purposes, even if they are dead?

Side one
Image

Side two
Image
Sent from my EyePhone

User avatar
slotcarrod
Approved Member
Posts: 4415
Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 10:57 pm
Location: Calgary Alberta Canada
Has thanked: 1 time
Been thanked: 41 times

Re: The vintage batteries thread- Q&A

Post by slotcarrod »

I would keep them! You never know when the bug hits you to restore a car, and now you don't have period correct batteries to put in them. :wink:

Charlie don't surf
Approved Member
Posts: 8921
Joined: Tue Apr 08, 2008 2:44 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 8 times

Re: The vintage batteries thread- Q&A

Post by Charlie don't surf »

Those Orion cells aren't easy to find- especially those red/yellow 1400's if you just have to get rid of them Lmk-
Otherwise you might want to keep them and see where you go with this vintage hobby-

xo1tech
Regular Member
Posts: 20
Joined: Sat May 25, 2013 11:45 pm

Nicad Cell Reversal

Post by xo1tech »

It was pretty common practice (back in the day), to use resistors to bring the cell voltage down close to zero to remove the memory effect that all nickel cadmium batteries exhibit.

The only problem I ever had with this was the fact that no two nicads would ever have the exact nominal voltage. That made the matching process necessary to maximize the average voltage a pack would supply.

I had assembled 2 - 1400 mah, 5 cell, PTI SUPER GOLD Saddle Packs to run in series in an RC10L. I forgot and left a 10 watt, 30 ohm, ceramic resistor on the (series) pack for a week.

The next time I went to charge them my charger recognized the fact that the polarity was reversed in the pack. I traced the charge leads back to the output ports on the charger, verified that the leads were hooked up correctly, and started the charge process again with no change in the result.

I took my volt meter and checked each individual cell (still connected in series), paying close attention to ensure I had the positive voltmeter lead on the positive end of the battery as I watched the polarity indicator on the voltmeter. 5 of the 10 cells had indeed reversed polarity.

Even though the individual cells had been closely matched by PTI, and again by me before I assembled them, there were still variations in the nominal voltage between the individual cells.

By leaving the resistor on the assembled pack for an extended period of time I had driven the highest voltage cells in the pack to zero voltage and the ones with lower nominal voltage had gone to the negative side of zero (reversing their polarity).

Given the PTI’s were $95.00 for 6 cells (un-assembled), and as new as they were, I was determined to find a way to save them (if at all possible).

With the cells still connected in series, I connected the same 30 ohm resistor to only one of the reversed cells and monitored the cell voltage until it came back up to zero volts.

I disconnected the resistor and quickly zapped the cell with 5 short bursts of 50 amps of current at 5v. The cell would immediately reverse again.

I finally enlisted another pair of hands and a friend’s help. After bringing the cell back up to zero again, I had him to control the connection of the resistor to the cell and remove it milliseconds AFTER I had started the zap process. We repeated this process for the other 4 and they all came back to the positive side of zero and then took a charge.

All 5 cells were damaged by the reversal, but after several cycles, the pack (as a whole) came back to approx. 97 percent of its original capacity.

Post Reply

Create an account or sign in to join the discussion

You need to be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

Register

Sign in

  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post
  • Vintage batteries
    by isobarik » » in Vintage Electronics
    1 Replies
    919 Views
    Last post by Bormac
  • AA batteries in vintage transmitters
    by juicedcoupe » » in Vintage Electronics
    6 Replies
    538 Views
    Last post by juicedcoupe
  • Do vintage batteries for display leak over time?
    by TokyoProf » » in Vintage Electronics
    16 Replies
    994 Views
    Last post by RC10th
  • Vintage R/C t-shirt thread
    by V12 » » in R/C Off-Topic / Chit-Chat
    34 Replies
    5268 Views
    Last post by magic
  • The Vintage 1/8 Onroad Thread
    by V12 » » in Other Makes/Models
    247 Replies
    46626 Views
    Last post by RC10resto
  • Tomas vintage rc10 thread.
    by Tomas Karlsson » » in RC10 Buggy Forum
    10 Replies
    1477 Views
    Last post by a01butal
  • My old is new RC10 vintage racer build thread!
    by Racinjason2316 » » in RC10 Buggy Forum
    5 Replies
    1465 Views
    Last post by Basher67
  • Vintage Team Car SE build thread
    by jcwrks » » in RC10 Buggy Forum
    4 Replies
    646 Views
    Last post by cas22

Return to “Vintage Electronics”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests