hagerty1 said:I must say as an after thought that it is funny that I have over 6000 cells here and have to go buy a battery...............
okashira said:hagerty1 said:Ok I just got my fully assembled welder in today. Being a welder of many other materials I did not even think to look at what it took to run this thing.... 900+ amps @ 12VDC seems to be it. Jesus I can weld 1/2" steel plate with 900 amps. In any event, I made the mistake of not checking this out before buying it. But now that it is here...... I am reading about people blowing Fets left and right etc. I have no desire to blow this thing up. I assume everyone is welding using 12VDC for a reason.
I have followed the thread but I am still not sure if I can run the welder "as is" without diode fixes etc.
I have plenty of spare cells to build a pack to supply it. Can some one advise an S/P combination that will give me around 100 welds between charges. My cells are Panasonic CGR18650DA. I have plenty. Is 3S at 9-12.6V the magic # for voltage? What is the voltage tolerance of the welder? Can it take a 4S @ 12-15.6V ? My cells are supposed to be ok at 2C constant and up to 4-5C pulse. The cells are 2400 mAh. So I am thinking in pulse I could use 10 amps per cell as a calculator without kicking the cells ass. If I need 900 amps that is 3S 90P ?? As I don't know voltage tolerances I'm not sure. I have the 270++ cells as spares/ experimenters/ etc. anyhow. I assume it can take high voltages if it can run on a fully charged lead acid 12 volt. I would guess everyone will tell me to just go buy a car battery and have at it.....?????
If this is going to be an ultra pain in my rear I would rather just sell it and do something else......as of now it is un used and in the USA Ohio
Yes, I am sorry, don't want to mis lead people.
The welder works fine as-is. You can weld up to 0.2mm nickel easily with the kit supplied by Riba using a lead acid starter battery
You can even weld 0.3mm nickel, but be mindful that the mosfets stay as cool as possible and don't use too powerful of a battery.
The diode is an upgrade for those of us that want 2000 amps and longer welding leads and want to weld lots and lots of 0.3mm nickel.
Just use a lead acid starter battery. Don't worry about amps, S, P, whatever, just use a battery like Riba recommends and it will be fine. You can prob use the one from your car.
This is the BEST 18650 spot welder you can buy for under $2,000. Period. Your next option is a Sunstone Engineering welder. This one can work just as well.
hagerty1 said:I must say as an after thought that it is funny that I have over 6000 cells here and have to go buy a battery...............
Offroader said:okashira said:hagerty1 said:Ok I just got my fully assembled welder in today. Being a welder of many other materials I did not even think to look at what it took to run this thing.... 900+ amps @ 12VDC seems to be it. Jesus I can weld 1/2" steel plate with 900 amps. In any event, I made the mistake of not checking this out before buying it. But now that it is here...... I am reading about people blowing Fets left and right etc. I have no desire to blow this thing up. I assume everyone is welding using 12VDC for a reason.
I have followed the thread but I am still not sure if I can run the welder "as is" without diode fixes etc.
I have plenty of spare cells to build a pack to supply it. Can some one advise an S/P combination that will give me around 100 welds between charges. My cells are Panasonic CGR18650DA. I have plenty. Is 3S at 9-12.6V the magic # for voltage? What is the voltage tolerance of the welder? Can it take a 4S @ 12-15.6V ? My cells are supposed to be ok at 2C constant and up to 4-5C pulse. The cells are 2400 mAh. So I am thinking in pulse I could use 10 amps per cell as a calculator without kicking the cells ass. If I need 900 amps that is 3S 90P ?? As I don't know voltage tolerances I'm not sure. I have the 270++ cells as spares/ experimenters/ etc. anyhow. I assume it can take high voltages if it can run on a fully charged lead acid 12 volt. I would guess everyone will tell me to just go buy a car battery and have at it.....?????
If this is going to be an ultra pain in my rear I would rather just sell it and do something else......as of now it is un used and in the USA Ohio
Yes, I am sorry, don't want to mis lead people.
The welder works fine as-is. You can weld up to 0.2mm nickel easily with the kit supplied by Riba using a lead acid starter battery
You can even weld 0.3mm nickel, but be mindful that the mosfets stay as cool as possible and don't use too powerful of a battery.
The diode is an upgrade for those of us that want 2000 amps and longer welding leads and want to weld lots and lots of 0.3mm nickel.
Just use a lead acid starter battery. Don't worry about amps, S, P, whatever, just use a battery like Riba recommends and it will be fine. You can prob use the one from your car.
This is the BEST 18650 spot welder you can buy for under $2,000. Period. Your next option is a Sunstone Engineering welder. This one can work just as well.
How many battery amps and pulse time do you recommend to weld .3 nickel?
Thanks.
NetPro said:While my welder is working fine right now using 0.15mm and 0.2mm nickel strips, just to be prepared for 0.3mm later on (and being the tinkerer I am) I decided to get the diode okashira suggested and it arrived today.
http://www.mouser.com/Search/Produc...NAvirtualkey65120000virtualkey747-DSA300I45NA
I feel a bit apprehensive about installing it and either nuking the welder or the diode (or both) and would like to request a favor from riba:
Since you are the designer of this little marvel, could you take one of the pictures from the DYI guide (or any other good picture of the current model) and kind of draw where is the best place to hook it up, please?
And recommended wire gauge too.
Okashira did one but his model is different from mine and the picture does not show the whole setup and I am not 100% sure what to do :?
I assume that adding the diode now--before I add an extra battery to my setup--won't cause any performance degradation or any kind of problem. Please confirm.
Any help is much appreciated![]()
Allex said:Guys like okashira who welds lots of cells. How fast does your tips wear out? I wonder if the tip wear partly depends on the current the battery gives. If current is to small(or maybe it is pulse time that is to long that makes the tips stick?), tips stick to nickel and wear out faster. Did we find any better electrodes than copper?
Yeah, I assumed black would be neutral, green would be ground.riba2233 said:Ouch! Yeah, oscilloscope probes are grounded, but you can insulate the ground pin on on it and there you go
Or measure something after transformer, something isolated.
okashira said:Allex said:Guys like okashira who welds lots of cells. How fast does your tips wear out? I wonder if the tip wear partly depends on the current the battery gives. If current is to small(or maybe it is pulse time that is to long that makes the tips stick?), tips stick to nickel and wear out faster. Did we find any better electrodes than copper?
No.. stick with copper.
1" long worth of tip lasts like 10,000 welds for me... And they cost like 5 cents to replace them when they get too short.
Allex said:okashira said:Allex said:Guys like okashira who welds lots of cells. How fast does your tips wear out? I wonder if the tip wear partly depends on the current the battery gives. If current is to small(or maybe it is pulse time that is to long that makes the tips stick?), tips stick to nickel and wear out faster. Did we find any better electrodes than copper?
No.. stick with copper.
1" long worth of tip lasts like 10,000 welds for me... And they cost like 5 cents to replace them when they get too short.
Yeah it is not the cost I am concern about bur rather the sharpening of them![]()
NetPro said:Nice 'scope, okashira.
I have been thinking to try one of those software oscilloscopes you install on your PC and connect via the sound card but have not had time to play with that.
Wonder if anyone has used one of these to get readings from the welder.
I know they have several limitations one of them being they do not display very well any frequency above 20 MHz (sound card limit) but for checking the welder they might be fine.
okashira said:Looks good if the right terminal is +