RCCrawler Forums

RCCrawler Forums (http://www.rccrawler.com/forum/)
-   Electronics (http://www.rccrawler.com/forum/electronics/)
-   -   How long to charge lipo (http://www.rccrawler.com/forum/electronics/345827-how-long-charge-lipo.html)

WestTxRc 11-02-2011 12:27 PM

How long to charge lipo
 
Im charging up a few new batterys and need to know the charge time.
Im using a THunder AC6
The first battery i need info is a Turnigy 5000 mAH 20-30C 2s Lipo
how long do i charge it if Im charging at 5.0 amps? 7.4v

Also have 2 Thunder Power 350 mAH 30-40C 2S lipos
How long do i charge them and do i charge them at 5.0 amps also?

ManxCrawler 11-02-2011 12:33 PM

Charge them at the rate recommended by the lipo manufacturer, historically this was always 1C or 1 x pack capacity in Ah

...so 5000mAh would charge at 5000mA (5A) and 350mAh would charge at 350mA (0.35A)

ninja turtle 11-02-2011 12:40 PM

have you read the instructions that came with your charger? if not i would definitely start there. mine answered most of my questions.

fred0000 11-02-2011 12:40 PM

its a peak charger, press go and wait. aslong as its all set corectly (5amp 2s/7,4v for your 5000mah 2s pack) it'll stop charging when its full, I dont know of a timed lipo charger (like the oldschool crank up charger and charge for X amount of time for X amount of capacity)

you defenatly don't want to charge those 350mah packs at 5 amps, thats insane. ManxCrawler got it, .35a (sounds like you need to read some manuals, even the stickers on the lipo's themselves will tell you how many amps to charge them at)

usualy it says "charge at 1c" wich is 1 times the capacity so your 5000mah gets charged at 5000mah (or 5 amps) 350mah gets charged at 350mah (.35 amps)

many many many threads covering this on EVERY RC forum.

TexasSP 11-02-2011 12:43 PM

The peak charger will charge the appropriate amount of time. Peaked a lipo will be 4.2v per cell. At a 1c charge rate a lipo will take approximately 1 hour to charge.

So a 5000mah pack at 5 amps will take 1 hour. Of course the charger is limited by it's out put watt capability too. So id you have a 50 watt charger it will only charge at a max of 50 watts which is amps/volts. For your 2s 5000mah pack you are fine but on if the pack was 3s you wouldn't charge at 5 amps but closer to 4 amps.

Charlie-III 11-02-2011 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TexasSP (Post 3360284)
The peak charger will charge the appropriate amount of time. Peaked, a lipo will be 4.2v per cell. At a 1c charge rate a lipo will take approximately 1 hour to charge.

So a 5000mah pack at 5 amps will take 1 hour. Of course the charger is limited by it's output watt capability too. So if you have a 50 watt charger it will only charge at a max of 50 watts which is amps/volts. For your 2s 5000mah pack you are fine but on if the pack was 3s you wouldn't charge at 5 amps but closer to 4 amps.

+1. A typical charge equates to an hour of charge if the charger can support your pack.
A "wall wart" charger may take a lot longer, since it can't balance charge, you run the risk of killing a cell.
Have more questions, please ask here."thumbsup""thumbsup"

WestTxRc 11-02-2011 03:36 PM

iF I HAD THE MANUALS i WOULD READ THEM. thats why I dont.
anyhow you were right it cuts off when it reaches capacity.

Charlie-III 11-02-2011 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WestTxRc (Post 3360555)
IF I HAD THE MANUALS I WOULD READ THEM, that's why I don't.
Anyhow, you were right it cuts off when it reaches capacity.

No, it doesn't.....it stops charging when it hits the programmed voltage based on settings......(chemistry & cell count).:roll:
If it doesn't hit the voltage within a specified time, it may time out (usually 120 minutes/2 hours). This is either due to a low rate/amp setting or a pack issue.8)

forbid89 11-02-2011 04:42 PM

manual:

http://www.hota-exp.com/UploadFile/D...1211005065.pdf


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:38 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.
Copyright 2004-2014 RCCrawler.com