T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2373.1 | Batteries for HiNotes! | JGODCL::LENSSEN | | Wed Apr 16 1997 10:52 | 25 |
| Dan,
I appreciate the situation you are in. Trying to come to a deal with
the manufacturer, in this case Toshiba, is next to impossible as I have
experienced myself some time ago when I looked for a solution for
Hinote Ultra batteries.
However I may have a solution for you which will take much less time to
realise. Recently I finished the development of a battery tester. This
tester can test many types of bateries and when possible revive them.
There is a preliminary description on the internet page of GSO
Engineering. When the photographs of the "Universal Battery Tester"
will be finished the page will be updated with the latest description.
You can find the information when you connect to "Europe GSO Homepage"
at http://piper7.jgo.dec.com, then select "GSO European
Engineering Homepage", "Products & Services", "Test & Diagnose
Tools", "Personal Computer" and finally "Mobiles".
We also have a service here at JGO to test batteries. So this could be
a relieve path for youre immediate needs.
Kind regards,
Jos Lenssen
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2373.2 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Apr 16 1997 11:25 | 11 |
| re: .1 by JGODCL::LENSSEN
re: battery tester
Jos,
That's the kind of initiative and engineering-based solution that
this company needs! Keep up the good work!
Cheers,
/Bill
|
2373.3 | physical abuse sometimes helps | CSC32::J_MCCLELLAND | Off in the ETHERnet | Wed Apr 16 1997 12:27 | 11 |
| When my battery pack quits taking a charge, I slam it down on a tile
floor on the flat top/bottom several times. Usually it will take a
charge after that. Something about a crystal growing internal to the
battery shorting it out and the physical blow breaking said crystal.
The other thing I've read, many years ago, was in Scientific American.
They were charging up a large capacitor and placing a ni-cad cell
across it. The electrical jolt would vaporize the crystal short inside
the cell.
John
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2373.4 | Some service houses will RE-BUILD them... | JULIET::HARRIS_MA | Networks Sales Exec | Wed Apr 16 1997 14:18 | 13 |
| For what it's worth, there are several places out here in Silicon
valley (and there may be places like this near you!) that will take ANY
laptop battery and re-build it with off-the-shelf parts inside. Most of
these battery packs if you peel the plastic away, are just made of a
multiple of individual NiCad or NiMH cells. Usually, 1.2 volt jobbers.
A 7.2V pack will have 6 of these in parrallel and elegantly encased in
plastic. If you need the pack fixed, you slice open the plastic and
replace these general-purpose cells and then seal it up again.
The places out here charge $50 to do this. I think Fry's even contracts
out this service for their customers.
Mark
|
2373.5 | dec p/n 30-43051-02 | JGODCL::TFRAZER | | Thu Apr 17 1997 03:19 | 6 |
| Hi,
This battery has a digital p/n as well: 30-43051-02.
Regards,
Ton.
|
2373.6 | The answer is... | CHOWDA::SMITH | Dan Smith | Thu Apr 17 1997 15:33 | 6 |
| Thanks to all for the various suggestions. However, after beating my
battery on the floor, with no apparent change in its condition, I think
I'll try ordering the part as suggested in -1. By the way, the
replacement P/N is 4A-43051-02. Let's see if they are available.
Dan
|
2373.7 | | SMURF::PBECK | Who put the bop in the hale-de-bop-de-bop? | Thu Apr 17 1997 17:10 | 5 |
| >Thanks to all for the various suggestions. However, after beating my
>battery on the floor, with no apparent change in its condition, ...
Good to hear you don't have to rewax.
|
2373.8 | | ATZIS1::50008::BACHNER | Mouse not found. Click OK to continue | Fri Apr 18 1997 14:00 | 8 |
| > multiple of individual NiCad or NiMH cells. Usually, 1.2 volt jobbers.
> A 7.2V pack will have 6 of these in parrallel and elegantly encased in
> plastic.
Nit: the six cells are connected in a row (or whatever the proper word is - can
someone tell me, please ?), but certainly not parallel.
Hans.
|
2373.9 | series | SMURF::PBECK | Who put the bop in the hale-de-bop-de-bop? | Fri Apr 18 1997 14:07 | 1 |
|
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2373.10 | RE: physical abuse sometimes helps (2373.3) | JGODCL::LENSSEN | | Mon Apr 21 1997 07:27 | 27 |
| LS,
In reply to the entry John made titled "physical abuse sometimes
helps", I would like to comment following.
It is probably out of frustration that John took to banging the
(fill in your preferred adjectives here) battery. However it is not
good engineering practise. John's battery has some sort of contact
problem but certainly it is not due to crystal growth that the battery
is not chargeable. Battery cells are build up with concentric cylinders
or folded foiles from positive electrode/separator/negative electrode.
The structure is very compact. The crystals grow on the electrodes and
not between them as I think John is thinking. These crystals cover the
electrodes preventing the chemical reaction, that exchanges ion's, to
take place.
The second point John makes seems from a different movie. However it is
possible to overcome the internal resistance of a battery cell by
applying a higher than normal voltage to its terminal. This technique
is called "High Impedance Charging". With a high voltage, current is
forced through the cell and hence helping the chemical recombination
of the active elements. Slowly the formed crystals will, in part,
desolve and so the usefull life of the battery is increased.
Kind regards,
Jos
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2373.11 | blast a battery into orbit or...? | VARDAF::CHURCH | Dave Church@VBE (DTN 828-6125) | Tue Apr 22 1997 09:16 | 14 |
| re:.10
##possible to overcome the internal resistance of a battery cell by
##applying a higher than normal voltage to its terminal. This technique
What sort of voltage 220-240V AC :-)
Seriously though what sort of DC voltage are you speaking of?
Basically I've got 2 dead batteries for my Sony Diskman which cost
about 25 pounds each ouch [luckily only need 1 at a time]! And there's
also my Hinote battery...
Dave
|
2373.12 | Buy new batteries... | JULIET::HARRIS_MA | Networks Sales Exec | Tue Apr 22 1997 14:26 | 13 |
| RE: .last few
I've seen NiCad reconditioners on the market for years and even tried a
few at times. Never happy with the results. In some cases, a 'dead'
battery appears to come back to life, only to find it's power storing
capability was greatly reduced, and hence the battery life was
terribly-short at best. Some batteries wouldn't even take this
reconditioning, some that did failed, NONE of them worked like a
brand-spankin' new battery!
Suggestion: Buy new batteries. Enjoy life.
Mark
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