| Electronics > Beginners |
| keeping batteries topped up |
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| Raj:
If I had to store my batteries, and i could do that while having them connected to solar power to extend their life. Should I (is it beneficial)? And what technologies I should? And at what voltages? I know lead acid can be stored this way at 13.5v &I cant store lithium. What about nimh? nicd? etc I'm thinking of this mainly to extend lifes and have them ready for when they're needed. |
| Audioguru:
You should not and do not need to trickle charge Li-PO and Ni-MH batteries. Rechargeable lithium batteries that have cobalt and have a fully charged voltage of 4.20V per cell can be stored at 3.7V to 3.8V per cell for many years. I have the Lithium battery from my daughter's first cell phone that has been stored at 3.7V for 20 years and it still works fine. I store the Li-PO batteries for my RC airplanes at 3.7V per cell each winter. Ni-Cads are toxic and are obsolete. They also become weak or shorted. Ni-MH cells made within about 5 years can hold a charge for one year. You can top-them-up for a few minutes each year. |
| KL27x:
IIRC, Ni-Cads can be stored fully depleted. Just charge them before you intend to use them. This is how I always used them in practice, anyway, because they lose charge so fast. |
| Audioguru:
Ni-Cad batteries are very toxic and obsolete. Ni-MH has replaced them years ago. Ni-Cads shorted when they were discharged and shorted when trickle charged. |
| FrankE:
You have charge controllers for each chemistry? |
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