Skippic
100 W
Forgot to answer the question 
No I haven't connected it to 220/240V yet.
No I haven't connected it to 220/240V yet.
Skippic said:Mine is holding up great. I've been using a 70uF motor run capacitor with 3ohm resistors and something like 3000mF electrolytic caps to stabilize the current. For control I used a voltage divider, an Arduino and the TextStar display. The Arduino measurement is far from accurate, so I've been averaging 100k measurements to display the battery voltage. To turn charging on and off I used an SSR:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/SSR-25A-Solid-State-Relay-24V-380V-AC-For-Temperature-Controller-/320887480356?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4ab6626024
Now I'm about to try using a 400uF cap as suggested by Farfle (big thanks):
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B005FUXGZG/ref=pe_175190_21431760_cs_sce_3p_dp_1_B
In the second charger I'm eliminating the resistors (maybe even the stabilizing caps).
Instead of the Arduino I'll use a much simpler and cheaper solution. My idea is to use a SSR, voltage dividers, voltage detectors and a cheap digital display.
Should be lighter, smaller with less connections and components to fail.
I'm attaching my Arduino code (dirty). I tried attaching the file, but ES didn't like it, so I tried renaming it to .txt, but it didn't help.
Farfle said:Don't use that cap!
What puzzles me is the second spike.
3wsparky said:Mine made a stonking great bang!
OK I didn't follow the diagram fully I used a 240V 80f capacitor instead of the 440 that they stated but i'm still confused as to why it popped.
The UK is on 240V mains and my cap was 240v rated but after about 4 mins charging it made a large bang and so i unplugged it!
what's happening to the 240v cap that i used?