What could the trouble be?
I had a weak but working 24V NIMH battery pack for something called an IGlide wheelchair. Name doesn’t matter too much except it is a light weight chair with two brushed motors and the controller is on the chair. The battery pack has it’s own circuit board which is *not* a bms. The battery circuit board is used for “gas gauge lights” left and right wheel power, thermister, and timer. It worked immediately before I switched batteries. The charge on the NIMH was 26.0V.
I cut out the old battery and spliced in a 24V NMC battery pack charged only to 25.5V. I thought I heard a tiny pop when the wires touched. Sure enough whether or not the “pop” meant anything this system did not work. Polarity was not reversed. And now it will not work with the NIMH either. That gas gauge I spoke about, instead of showing how many lights go on, just the bottom one flashes red.
Although not connected to the chair during the mishap, the battery is fused from the chair with a 20A 32V fuse. I mention that since the spliced in battery pack is that 7s2p Samsung 2200 mAh 10A I mentioned in my previous question.
I don’t understand how unhooking one battery and hooking up a similar voltage of another would blow the pcb. Does anyone have an idea?
I had a weak but working 24V NIMH battery pack for something called an IGlide wheelchair. Name doesn’t matter too much except it is a light weight chair with two brushed motors and the controller is on the chair. The battery pack has it’s own circuit board which is *not* a bms. The battery circuit board is used for “gas gauge lights” left and right wheel power, thermister, and timer. It worked immediately before I switched batteries. The charge on the NIMH was 26.0V.
I cut out the old battery and spliced in a 24V NMC battery pack charged only to 25.5V. I thought I heard a tiny pop when the wires touched. Sure enough whether or not the “pop” meant anything this system did not work. Polarity was not reversed. And now it will not work with the NIMH either. That gas gauge I spoke about, instead of showing how many lights go on, just the bottom one flashes red.
Although not connected to the chair during the mishap, the battery is fused from the chair with a 20A 32V fuse. I mention that since the spliced in battery pack is that 7s2p Samsung 2200 mAh 10A I mentioned in my previous question.
I don’t understand how unhooking one battery and hooking up a similar voltage of another would blow the pcb. Does anyone have an idea?