![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]() The previous poster was making measuremnts that disproved the argument that there is a loss while temporarilly having both masters on while switching batteries.Whichever way you slice that it is just not an issue that causes any significant power loss, It is totally insignificant, you lose much more power though ohmic loses in fuses and circuit breakers. Of course that relies on the operator not to accidently leave two master switches both on all the time (without taking the diode approach). Darryl Gary Emerson wrote: Tinwings wrote: Being the incurably curious type, I decided to test this theory. I took two known good 7Ah 12V SLA batteries and discharged one to 8 volts (resting) with a 12V light bulb. The other battery I topped off with a charger to 13.6 volts. I connected the two using less than two feet of 18 gauge wire and a ordinary toggle switch. Using a 60 Mhz bandwith oscilloscope and a hall-effect type current probe I looked at the resulting waveform when I closed the switch; a nice square edged rise to about 3 amps, tapering down to 2.5 amps in a few seconds. Because I didn't know what the frequency response of this current probe was, I inserted a precision .001 ohm current shunt in line (very high frequency response) and used the scope to watch the voltage drop across it. The results were identical; no current spike, no inrush of current - just a nice square edged waveform rising to about 3 amps. This simply isn't going to weld contacts, burn out switches or blow (properly sized) fuses. As for "wasting energy" by dumping from the good battery into the dead battery when switching over - just do the math. Even if the two batteries were connected for as much as 5 seconds while switching from one to the other (two switch or "make before break" switch arrangement), you will be using less than one thousanth of the good battery's capacity to charge the "dead" battery. If the batteries are both "good", but not charged equally, then the last part is true. If a battery happens to go "bad" and won't take a charge then the situation is different. Then the "bad" battery will just suck down the extra power from the good battery and that power will not be recovered. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Electric maned airplane | Flyingmonk | Piloting | 26 | July 20th 06 05:43 AM |
Electric maned airplane | Flyingmonk | Home Built | 26 | July 20th 06 05:43 AM |
Becker AR-3201 radio owners: check your batteries | sssarah | Soaring | 3 | May 24th 06 07:40 AM |
Switching Batteries Advice? | ContestID67 | Soaring | 17 | January 12th 06 01:02 AM |
Batteries, charger for Yaesu handheld - NiCad or NiMH? | David Herman | Owning | 10 | November 7th 04 04:30 PM |