Yes you can, but I would not pas over 2Achessir said:And could you also charge an individual cell through the balance connector?
bobale said:Chessir, forget what I've told you about charing them. If you charge cells below ~2V it can only end ugly. If you want to salvage other cells just separate them, you have a lot of guides here.
+1bobale said:Chessir, forget what I've told you about charing them. If you charge cells below ~2V it can only end ugly. If you want to salvage other cells just separate them, you have a lot of guides here.
That looks suspicious, how are you charging them? I can not imagine that they were balance charged and if then your charger must be faulty.chessir said:Pk#1 cell1- 0.00 cell2-0.00 cell3- 3.64 cell4- 3.66
Pk#2 0.07 0.07 3.65 3.67
parabellum said:That looks suspicious, how are you charging them? I can not imagine that they were balance charged and if then your charger must be faulty.chessir said:Pk#1 cell1- 0.00 cell2-0.00 cell3- 3.64 cell4- 3.66
Pk#2 0.07 0.07 3.65 3.67
parabellum said:Next time you balance charge healthy pack, check individual cell voltages. I have received HK charger that is measuring 1 cell 0.05V over its real voltage. I am sure it is not the worst case of QC in HK.![]()
Those are just randomly taken colors 1 for every cell in 4s pack.JimW said:I think perhaps my question got lost in the shuffle..
auraslip,
Can you tell me the significance of the Red, Yellow and Green on your spreadsheet. I understand that they represent the cell voltage, but what conclusions do you draw from the voltages. Does red indicate a bad cell, or just a low voltage one? How low a voltage would you consider to indicate a bad cell? Or what kind of voltage and discharge curve would you like to see to confirm a good cell.
Sorry for all the newbee questions.
Thanks,
Jim.