I have about 100+ 20v (18v NiCd/NiMH & Li-Ion) packs that all charge to 19.5 - 20.5v but I suspect some of them don't have such good holding capacity. I also have many hundreds (possibly thousands) of individual NiCd and Li-ion cells that I'd like to check as well.
Doing the packs one by one isnt' such a big deal, but doing the individuals will be a major PITA and lots of time. Any ideas on how to speed this up? Also, will I be able to determin the MAH of the battery (say it's printed 2600MaH new, but only gives 1200 - vs a 2600 new battery that has been worn down that lost some capacity - can these be told apart?)
I'm trying to figure the best way to do this with what I have on hand. I will buy equipment to do this as I've been getting about 50-80 packs a week, sometimes more.
I understand if I charge to full, then put a load on it (IDK what kind of load to apply for 18-20v that would be constant) and run for 20 mins - check V, run 20 mins, check v, run for 20 mins, check V, etc until I hit the low point of say 3.0-3.2v per cell. It'd be nice to have a volt meter that would beep when it hits the calculated low voltage (and maybe turn off load), real nice with built in stopwatch.
Is there any software that has this setup, USB connection and then just add a load?
Any suggestions on how to set up this testing process is appreciated.
Doing the packs one by one isnt' such a big deal, but doing the individuals will be a major PITA and lots of time. Any ideas on how to speed this up? Also, will I be able to determin the MAH of the battery (say it's printed 2600MaH new, but only gives 1200 - vs a 2600 new battery that has been worn down that lost some capacity - can these be told apart?)
I'm trying to figure the best way to do this with what I have on hand. I will buy equipment to do this as I've been getting about 50-80 packs a week, sometimes more.
I understand if I charge to full, then put a load on it (IDK what kind of load to apply for 18-20v that would be constant) and run for 20 mins - check V, run 20 mins, check v, run for 20 mins, check V, etc until I hit the low point of say 3.0-3.2v per cell. It'd be nice to have a volt meter that would beep when it hits the calculated low voltage (and maybe turn off load), real nice with built in stopwatch.
Is there any software that has this setup, USB connection and then just add a load?
Any suggestions on how to set up this testing process is appreciated.