Doctorbass
100 GW
Still in link to the "the single cell charging post"
Well.. i see that many people are more and more interested about lithium cells and abandon nimh and sla
But it seems that some still have a problem about charging or bothering with balancing feature problem..... and 3.6 or 4.2V
By my side i really think i have THE solution to solve that for cheap.
I've been writing many post about that. here is one more :lol:
But if you still are interested to charge fast and make it simple
read this below:
You only need a little bit of DIY skill and to not be lazy..
That method suggest you to charge each paralle group cell with one charger module.I mean cheap because this method is very versatile and offer you multiples possibles voltages for different chemistry IN ONE CHARGER! and that the performance will exceed most of the comercial charger availlable for ebikes.
THE OTHER MAIN ADVANDAGE IS: that with the same charger you could be able to charge A123 (3.6V) AND normal li-ion cells 4.2V) by simply replacing a resistor value on the dc-dc....not bad!
To do that follow this:
-Determine how many serie cell you have in your entire pack
-Determine in how much time you would like to charge your pack
-Go on ebay and search for : dc-dc 5V
-Try to find the auctions that have availlable at least the same number of dc-dc than the number of serie cell you have.
ex: you have 12 cells: search for 12 item or more batch availlable. often you will find them at 9.99$ each
If your pack have 10Ah, and you want to charge in 2h, you will need dc-dc that have at least 5A
Buy a main power supply that can supply all the dc-dc input at the same time.
see how to calculate below:
let say 12x A123 cell = 43.2V
and that you charge at 5A mean you need that output power: 5A x 43.2V = 216W
DC-DC are efficient to around at least 80% so you will need to multiply by 1.25 that power for the input... that mean 270W of input total on all the combined dc-dc parallel input.
Generally DC-DC work with 36 to 72V on their input and have a regulated voltage and a current limit on the output and input. Some have 12V or 15V input but they are rare.
Ideally a 48V power supply do the job great.
Now for a 270W need, a 350W power supply should be of with a little safe margin.
Now, all you would need is to order the main power supply and the dc-dc that you determined, to get them and assemble these like i suggest here:
first, you will need to begin with the dc-dc voltage adjustment
-search on google the pdf spec of your dc-dc. (use dc-dc, their brand or model and pdf key words)
-buy a 10k 10turn potentiometer
-solder their pin 1 and 2 on the trim down input pins of the
dc dc.
(if your dc-dc have not sensing pins, skip the next step)
-solder the sense (-) pin on the out(-)
-solder the sense (+) pin on the out(+)
-put the 48V juice on the input pin of the dc-dc, plug your voltmeter on the + and - output pins and adjust the voltage to the recommanded cell max charge voltage.. often 3.6 or 4.2V.. try to adjust teh best as you can !
-do that for all dc-dc you need
-if recommanded on the spec add some heatsink on them.. (if you have enough space you can fix all them on the main power supply alluminium top cover if it have a fan it should work fine.
-solder all their voltage input in parallel (all + in parallel) and (all - in parallel)
- solder all the seperate output in serie and solder one wire for each cell tap you have
(ex: you have 12cells, you will need 13 wires)
-try to choose wire size awg 16 for 5A charging, 14 for 8A charging and 12 for 15A charging.
Add multipin connector between battery and the cahrger
It's done!
You now can safely cahrge all the cell you want faster than any other method and have in mind that the balance will be perfect after the charge !
Generally the total cost should vary from:
100$ for a 5A 10s charger balancer,
175$ for a 10A 10s charger balancer
250$ for a 30A 10s charger balancer
I really belive THAT IS THE BEST SOLUTION and that will keep your cells top shape charged at their max capacity without loss produced by seperated balancer that draw precious mAh !
:wink:
Doc
Well.. i see that many people are more and more interested about lithium cells and abandon nimh and sla
But it seems that some still have a problem about charging or bothering with balancing feature problem..... and 3.6 or 4.2V
By my side i really think i have THE solution to solve that for cheap.
I've been writing many post about that. here is one more :lol:
But if you still are interested to charge fast and make it simple

You only need a little bit of DIY skill and to not be lazy..
That method suggest you to charge each paralle group cell with one charger module.I mean cheap because this method is very versatile and offer you multiples possibles voltages for different chemistry IN ONE CHARGER! and that the performance will exceed most of the comercial charger availlable for ebikes.
THE OTHER MAIN ADVANDAGE IS: that with the same charger you could be able to charge A123 (3.6V) AND normal li-ion cells 4.2V) by simply replacing a resistor value on the dc-dc....not bad!
To do that follow this:
-Determine how many serie cell you have in your entire pack
-Determine in how much time you would like to charge your pack
-Go on ebay and search for : dc-dc 5V
-Try to find the auctions that have availlable at least the same number of dc-dc than the number of serie cell you have.
ex: you have 12 cells: search for 12 item or more batch availlable. often you will find them at 9.99$ each
If your pack have 10Ah, and you want to charge in 2h, you will need dc-dc that have at least 5A
Buy a main power supply that can supply all the dc-dc input at the same time.
see how to calculate below:
let say 12x A123 cell = 43.2V
and that you charge at 5A mean you need that output power: 5A x 43.2V = 216W
DC-DC are efficient to around at least 80% so you will need to multiply by 1.25 that power for the input... that mean 270W of input total on all the combined dc-dc parallel input.
Generally DC-DC work with 36 to 72V on their input and have a regulated voltage and a current limit on the output and input. Some have 12V or 15V input but they are rare.
Ideally a 48V power supply do the job great.
Now for a 270W need, a 350W power supply should be of with a little safe margin.
Now, all you would need is to order the main power supply and the dc-dc that you determined, to get them and assemble these like i suggest here:
first, you will need to begin with the dc-dc voltage adjustment
-search on google the pdf spec of your dc-dc. (use dc-dc, their brand or model and pdf key words)
-buy a 10k 10turn potentiometer
-solder their pin 1 and 2 on the trim down input pins of the
dc dc.
(if your dc-dc have not sensing pins, skip the next step)
-solder the sense (-) pin on the out(-)
-solder the sense (+) pin on the out(+)
-put the 48V juice on the input pin of the dc-dc, plug your voltmeter on the + and - output pins and adjust the voltage to the recommanded cell max charge voltage.. often 3.6 or 4.2V.. try to adjust teh best as you can !
-do that for all dc-dc you need
-if recommanded on the spec add some heatsink on them.. (if you have enough space you can fix all them on the main power supply alluminium top cover if it have a fan it should work fine.
-solder all their voltage input in parallel (all + in parallel) and (all - in parallel)
- solder all the seperate output in serie and solder one wire for each cell tap you have
(ex: you have 12cells, you will need 13 wires)
-try to choose wire size awg 16 for 5A charging, 14 for 8A charging and 12 for 15A charging.
Add multipin connector between battery and the cahrger
It's done!
You now can safely cahrge all the cell you want faster than any other method and have in mind that the balance will be perfect after the charge !
Generally the total cost should vary from:
100$ for a 5A 10s charger balancer,
175$ for a 10A 10s charger balancer
250$ for a 30A 10s charger balancer
I really belive THAT IS THE BEST SOLUTION and that will keep your cells top shape charged at their max capacity without loss produced by seperated balancer that draw precious mAh !
:wink:
Doc