Soundguy
Old Timer
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2002
- Messages
- 51,575
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- Central florida
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</font><font color="blue" class="small">( it is impractical to charge a battery by paralleling it with a power supply without current limit )</font>
I'd refine that to say that for long term charging it is impracticle.
To simply 'boost' a weakoned battery.. a constant current charger is fine.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Any practical voltage regulator that charges a battery must have some sort of tracking circuit to maintain its voltage somewhere above the varying battery voltage )</font>
I imagine that a simple float style circuit would be fine.. as charge votlage raaches max.. current drops off.. etc.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( and use some sort of current limiting device. )</font>
I'm not a big fan of ham handed technicians or engineers tossing in power resistors to make up for circuit design flaws or out of tolerance operating parameters.. etc.
I've got an electric scooter charger on my bench right now repairing it. Unit has obviously been thru factor re-work several times with the addition of much point to point wireing, as well as an infamous power resistor in line with the output. Very brittle design that IMHO was just wainting to 'let the smoke out' when it left the factory...
While I'm not super hapy about ineficient designs either.. semiconductor current limiting is a bit more tolerable than power disipation.. I.E. series pass regulator.. etc.
I wasn't overly thrilled with the yanmar charge system either.
As I remember we were thinking the dynamo was also a permanent field setup.. leaving the user to regulate the charge voltage to varry charge current. I think collectively we came up with about a dozen ways that worked better than the yanmar method.. however some were component intensive.. and more expensive than the yanmar replacement regulator or the 'will-fit' kholer regulator. Some were nearly as impracticle.. however did work.. etc.
I can't remember if a triac or switching design was mentioned or not?? In any case.. it was a low "I" system..
Soundguy
I'd refine that to say that for long term charging it is impracticle.
To simply 'boost' a weakoned battery.. a constant current charger is fine.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Any practical voltage regulator that charges a battery must have some sort of tracking circuit to maintain its voltage somewhere above the varying battery voltage )</font>
I imagine that a simple float style circuit would be fine.. as charge votlage raaches max.. current drops off.. etc.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( and use some sort of current limiting device. )</font>
I'm not a big fan of ham handed technicians or engineers tossing in power resistors to make up for circuit design flaws or out of tolerance operating parameters.. etc.
I've got an electric scooter charger on my bench right now repairing it. Unit has obviously been thru factor re-work several times with the addition of much point to point wireing, as well as an infamous power resistor in line with the output. Very brittle design that IMHO was just wainting to 'let the smoke out' when it left the factory...
While I'm not super hapy about ineficient designs either.. semiconductor current limiting is a bit more tolerable than power disipation.. I.E. series pass regulator.. etc.
I wasn't overly thrilled with the yanmar charge system either.
As I remember we were thinking the dynamo was also a permanent field setup.. leaving the user to regulate the charge voltage to varry charge current. I think collectively we came up with about a dozen ways that worked better than the yanmar method.. however some were component intensive.. and more expensive than the yanmar replacement regulator or the 'will-fit' kholer regulator. Some were nearly as impracticle.. however did work.. etc.
I can't remember if a triac or switching design was mentioned or not?? In any case.. it was a low "I" system..
Soundguy