Ohhh... Now I see. Did not realise that this is an alloy! So yeah. I will go with 0.1 copper foil an 0.15 nickel on top.Ive tried several suppliers and varying thicknesses of cupronickel, and they all welded like crap. Just use copper foil and NICKEL not nickel plated steel, that stuff will start rusting in no time at all
if you keep them dry, and not in a super humid environment it wont be detrimental, probably a couple years before you see any rust, but you would be surprised how fast they can rust with humidity. i suppose its not that big of a deal when you are doing copper under them, as they are essentially just there to hold the copper in place. however, welding them is not very fun because they will shoot out a ton of sparks at every weld vs nickel with almost none.Ohhh... Now I see. Did not realise that this is an alloy! So yeah. I will go with 0.1 copper foil an 0.15 nickel on top.
Because I have also nickel/steel laying around. How critical is nickel/steel for tool battery packs (sealed) used indoors and outdoor only in dry conditions? Never heard of such relevant problems you stated.
Austria.Are you ordering within the EU or are you outside?
I see the gold coloured negative terminal on pictures of protected NCR18650B cells. Are your cells 70 mm long instead of 65 mm? If so, you're trying to weld to a printed circuit board. It would be very thin copper plated with nickel, then gold.Hi folks! I just received and assembled by kWeld, my first spot welder! Unfortunately out of the box I'm having an issue, but I think the issue is not with the welder, but I need some advice from folks such as yourselves.
I tested the kWeld first with an old retired 18650 scavenged from something long ago. I am welding 0.1mm nickel strip. I set the kWeld to 20 J, and it worked great.
Then I tried to build a simple 1S4P 18650 pack with brand new freshly charged Panasonic NCR18650B. The negative terminal has some sort of copper/gold colored coating (which must be conductive since I charged them up in my charger).
When I attempt to spot weld the nickel strip, there are a lot of sparks and the kWeld complains "Undercurr" and the resulting weld is, well not a weld, instead there the nickel strip has holes where the probes were touching, and the surface of the battery is pitted (green circle in photo)
I tried sanding this colored coating off (red circled in photo) to reveal the normal silver colored metal underneath. However that didn't improve the situation.
Am I doing something wrong? Any tips would be appreciated.
Thanks for the info TDA78.I see the gold coloured negative terminal on pictures of protected NCR18650B cells. Are your cells 70 mm long instead of 65 mm? If so, you're trying to weld to a printed circuit board. It would be very thin copper plated with nickel, then gold.
Read and understand the power supply requirements detailed on page 7 of the operating manual.I just assembled a new Kweld bought 10 months ago as a backup.
It works but I feel it has different performance.
The difference is the battery setup. Old has 4s30Ah lipo at 1700A CAL rating after test
My new battery is a 2s10p high performance 21700 charged at 3,6v right now for each series.
With first test of CAL it gives out 700A
What performance will I get from a fully charged pack at 8,4v? My estimate is 850A but still as you can se there is a difference in amps rating of my two setups.
My new and lower rating setup feels that the pure nickel 0,15 is very lose to the cell. I use 29 J and it it very good with my older higher rating battery setup.
I can guess the difference is timing but is this really the only difference?
Do I have to higher the Joules to counteract this new weaker battery?
I need to know what to do to get better performance.
Please any input is very appreciated!
lipo at 1700A CAL rating after test
21700 it gives out 700A
I need to know what to do to get better performance.
Please any input is very appreciated!
Very generalized statement that is not so true in 2024This is the problem. round cells are very weak.
You can't weld onto the protection board, but since it is a circuit board, you should be able to solder to it (unless it's one of those metallic boards) - and since it sits apart from the cell itself, that shouldn't take any damage.Thanks for the info TDA78.
They are about 68mm long. Oh interesting, so these are likely protected cells. I've never really encountered those before. I can see those wouldn't be useful when building a battery pack with cells in series, but since I want to put cells only in parallel it seems they could be used, but only if I don't weld to them. :/
Guess I need to buy some unprotected cells.
I will read.Read and understand the power supply requirements detailed on page 7 of the operating manual.
Suggested is 3 or more liion or lipoly in seriesI will read.
After charge to 3,8 per cell the power is no 750A tested with a steady hand.
My question is regarding the options I have and if someone have seen a similar pattern in their usage of their Kweld.
I can build a more powerfull battery or use 3s which seems to be better.
I will read that part of the manual first.
Thanks!
3s seems to glue the nickel to the cells correctly!Suggested is 3 or more liion or lipoly in series