Stryfe Batteries Heating Up!?
#1
Posted 06 March 2015 - 10:53 PM
At this point I'm a little worried because something is happening to my Stryfe.
After I replaced them with the Tamiya Sprint Dash motors, I rewired them like the stock motors.
I'm running them on 3 Ultrafires +1 Dummy.
At first, the performance was solid. I really liked it.
Then the next day, I tested them out again. They were rather weak and suddenly the Ultrafires became really hot. Is it a short circuit?
Soon, I thought the Ultrafires were almost dead, so I decided to charge the batteries. 2 of them worked perfectly but one just couldn't charge(my charger has an L.E.D indicator). What's wrong with my stryfe?
Am I gonna blow up my Ultrafires? (All my Ultrafires are 14500 protected cells)
I need help urgently. Thanks.
#2
Posted 07 March 2015 - 01:07 AM
The protection PCB should keep them safe. That's kind of the entire reason it's there.Am I gonna blow up my Ultrafires? (All my Ultrafires are 14500 protected cells)
That said, ultrafires are very unfit for this purpose. A brief google search fails to find their official safe discharge rate. Similar li-ion cells are rated to about 1-2C, which means these can really only deliver about 1A continuous. Those motors ask for 2.8-3.8A at 2.4-3.0V. You're feeding them 11.1V, so they're actually probably drawing somewhere in the ballpark of 10A or more at times. This is for one motor, you're driving two, so double that. 20A is something that even unprotected ultrafire 14500s will never, ever be able to do unless you run something like 10 or 15 of them in parallel.
Ultrafires and their cousin trustfires have their place, but driving motors is not it. Feeding 11.1V to motors rated for 3 is not a good place to be either. Sure, the Tamiyas might be able to handle it, but I'd be very careful. What you really should do is get a 1S (lithium) or 3cell (nickel) battery pack that can deliver enough current.
So back to the beginning question. Are your batteries safe? I'd say probably, but you're abusing the hell out of them, and I'm really not sure how the protection PCB will react.
#3
Posted 07 March 2015 - 03:10 AM
When higher than normal current is drawn the protection shuts down the cell that cell that is not taking a charge either got discharged below or tripped the circuit. If you must go up to at least imr batteries they will be better off than the ultrafires which i would dispose of at this point or store them in a fire proof box. It sounds like the op over discharged them.The protection PCB should keep them safe. That's kind of the entire reason it's there.
That said, ultrafires are very unfit for this purpose. A brief google search fails to find their official safe discharge rate. Similar li-ion cells are rated to about 1-2C, which means these can really only deliver about 1A continuous. Those motors ask for 2.8-3.8A at 2.4-3.0V. You're feeding them 11.1V, so they're actually probably drawing somewhere in the ballpark of 10A or more at times. This is for one motor, you're driving two, so double that. 20A is something that even unprotected ultrafire 14500s will never, ever be able to do unless you run something like 10 or 15 of them in parallel.
Ultrafires and their cousin trustfires have their place, but driving motors is not it. Feeding 11.1V to motors rated for 3 is not a good place to be either. Sure, the Tamiyas might be able to handle it, but I'd be very careful. What you really should do is get a 1S (lithium) or 3cell (nickel) battery pack that can deliver enough current.
So back to the beginning question. Are your batteries safe? I'd say probably, but you're abusing the hell out of them, and I'm really not sure how the protection PCB will react.
The best option would be a lipo 1s with the highest amperage he could find. Next a single purple efest 18650 30A. after that efest v2 14500 if possible 2 in parallel i have been toying with the idea of reworking my stryfe's battery box to have 2p2s efest 14500 v2 also i would recommend a voltage monitor addition to prevent over discharge in the future.
#4
Posted 07 March 2015 - 04:54 AM
*edit*
Now that I have time to sit down and think about it, those protection pcb's only protect from low voltage. They won't do anything for current draw.
The tamiya motors just pulled too much out of the *fires and one shorted internally and the others are half cooked.
Edited by darthskids, 07 March 2015 - 03:52 PM.
#5
Posted 07 March 2015 - 03:26 PM
#6
Posted 08 March 2015 - 12:46 AM
Not sure if there are any zero-to-hero writeups available. A lot of guides out there give outdated, incomplete, and/or wrong info. But a suggested read is http://torukmakto4.b...ated-guide.htmlMight I slip a Q in here requesting a good guide (with a shopping list) for someone totally new to modding electronic blasters?
And a 2-cell (2.4V) NiMH battery pack will work fine for tamiyas, actually; 3-cells NiMH push their rating a bit.
-Jwasko, STILL Sole Surviving member of Steel City Nerf and Sober Sister of the Sex Dwarves
We NERF ON all day, and FUCK OFF all night
#7
Posted 09 March 2015 - 12:39 AM
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