Yeah, drama making a simple rule complicated. 3.6-4.1. All good. 3.2 on occasion, no problem as with 4.2.Oh man....
See Felix. He’s sorted it. Sorry sarcasm and personal pokes from nom de plumes frustrate me.I have a headache and I just found this thread.
Here dude, you’re good! The numbers for LiIon (NMC) are really close. I get that you were honestly trying to help with no malice or reason to provide inaccurate info. It all gets confusing. I’m in the keep is dimple stupid crowd. For a majority of 18650 batts, 3.4-3.6 and 4.1 are a great parameter for longevity. I’m looking forward to your batts for my spot welder. This is clearly NOT a LiPo forum.I was wrong to call an 18650 a lipo. I use the term lipo so much in my business I tend to call anything with lithium in it a lipo. So my apologies for that. But this thread is about voltage percentages and everything else I posted was correct. i don't like being accused of posting false info. My post are to help inform those that want to understand the care and feeding of our batteries. See I almost said lipos. I hope I was able to help some of you guys about the importance of cell percentages and how to use them. Seeing that chart from juice got me going and I have an ebike just like the rest of you. I want my battery to last just as much as you do. If anybody has any question on your battery feel free to ask.
I was wrong to call an 18650 a lipo. I use the term lipo so much in my business I tend to call anything with lithium in it a lipo. So my apologies for that. But this thread is about voltage percentages and everything else I posted was correct. i don't like being accused of posting false info. My post are to help inform those that want to understand the care and feeding of our batteries. See I almost said lipos. I hope I was able to help some of you guys about the importance of cell percentages and how to use them. Seeing that chart from juice got me going and I have an ebike just like the rest of you. I want my battery to last just as much as you do. If anybody has any question on your battery feel free to ask.
Great, show me a 18650 that can support 3 minute flight times, If you can do such a thing you will TRANSFORM the RC industry and likely l make lots of $$ in the process.It's not my definition. It comes from the scientist in the industry. When I read about it they said the scientist wanted a way to differentiate from the metal cylinder cells. Since both are li-ion. It of course also stands for lithium polymer too. If you do a search you can find both definitions.
Different animals for different purposes. Hobby packs save money. LiIon save garages and houses.Great, show me a 18650 that can support 3 minute flight times, If you can do such a thing you will TRANSFORM the RC industry and likely l make lots of $$ in the process.
I would love to see this as 18650s are much lighter for the same MAH. I have several planes that demonstrate this (i.e. readymade rc nanogoblin which get over 30 minutes of flight time due to using 18650 vs typical lipo pack which is much heavier)
I have the ability to measure cell IR on my 'lipos' vs 18650 packs, let me know what I need to provide
Almost true, 18650 batts are easier and far less volatile than RC packs. I will only use LiPo for my welder, and it's charged and stored in an ammo can. I remove the gaskets and keep mine latched for storage AND charging. Overcharged= fire. Allow to be discharged below 3.2V = fire. Pretty easy to maintain when they are small RC packs, but once a pack is built for an eBike with good mileage you've got a fairly large and volatile package. To cover the negative side...18650's won't be in RC (at least stuff that flies) because of the weight of the metal jacket. The reason there are few issues with 18650's in e-bikes is because the battery packs have BMS built into them and the chargers are not complicated devices for the user, they are "on" or "off".. With hobby lipo, the BMS is the charger and there's probably 100 different chargers you can buy, all with unique programming functions.. Hobbyists make mistakes, it's human. Charge your lipo on the NiMH setting and bingo, there's your fire. 18650's by themselves are no more stable than lipo's
18650's won't be in RC (at least stuff that flies) because of the weight of the metal jacket. The reason there are few issues with 18650's in e-bikes is because the battery packs have BMS built into them and the chargers are not complicated devices for the user, they are "on" or "off".. With hobby lipo, the BMS is the charger and there's probably 100 different chargers you can buy, all with unique programming functions.. Hobbyists make mistakes, it's human. Charge your lipo on the NiMH setting and bingo, there's your fire. 18650's by themselves are no more stable than lipo's
Is this the right room for an argument?.... GENERALLY speaking, 18650's aren't used for RC aircraft, your aircraft is an anomoly.... 50mohm IR? LOL... Not in a 10s F5B glider......ever... Internal resistance is far more temperature related than capacity related