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Quad FM4 Battery
On Wed, 24 Feb 2016 08:12:11 +0000, Woody wrote:
"Johnny B Good" wrote in message ... On Sat, 20 Feb 2016 04:40:14 -0800, Phil Allison wrote: RJH wrote: Phil is right but I would wait until you have extracted it before buying a replacement as it could be Ni-Cad or Ni-MH depending on the age of the tuner, and they require slightly different charging regimes. Equally it could be 3V, 3.6V or 4.8V although I would admit that the size suggests the latter. ** AFAIK, Quad FM4s only ever used 4.8V NiCd battery packs with four cells specially made for memory back-up. It was trickle charged at a few mA whenever the tuner was powered up. I doubt any re-engineering is needed to employ a four cell NiMH pack instead. Agreed, In fact, when I was looking for a replacement 3 cell NiCd for a Potterton 2000 CH program controller, they'd changed to a larger capacity NiMH version. Oddly, the tagless drop in batteries used by this programmer were over twice the price of the solder tagged ones. Naturally, I bought the cheaper tagged battery and pulled the tags off and dressed the 'pips' with a fine file to recreate the plug in version at less than half price for less than ten minutes of D-I-Y activity. :-) The 4.8 volts seems unusually high for battery backed memory though. The more usual with static cmos ram being 3.6 volts. CMOS sram is guaranteed to retain data integrity right down to the 2 volt point - and that includes the RTCs with their 70 8 bit registers 'going spare' as used by IBM in their AT PCs first marketed back in August 1984). -- Quad list it as a 4V battery - quite how they achieve that is another question altogether! It might be the charger's nominal upper voltage limit for a 3 cell NiCd (blue) or 3 cell NiMH (green) battery. Constant current charging of either type results in a 'resting voltage' immediately after going off charge in the region of 1.4 volts per cell, usually dropping to 1.36 volts after a day or two. The 1.2 volts rating for these cells is the minimum voltage just prior to becoming exhausted of useful charge. It's quite likely that a very simple blocking diode and current limiting resistor charging circuit fed off the 5v logic supply is all that's being used to keep the battery charged up just like the arrangement used on early pre-Pentium PC motherboards to maintain the RTC battery backup (typically a 3 cell 60mAH NiCd soldered onto the board). If needs must, you could replace it with a lithium primary cell (3.1v) and snip the resistor lead to disable the charging. Those CR2032 180mAH coin cells now commonly used in PCs will keep the RTC running for anywhere from 18 months in the case of the ****e PC Chips branded motherboards right up to 5 years or more on the better quality brands of motherboard. If you wire in one of those "Half AA" Lithium 'batteries' so favoured by the manufacturers of smoke detectors guaranteed to last ten years on their soldered in battery, I should imagine it will last a couple of decades at least. -- Johnny B Good |
Quad FM4 Battery
Johnny B Good wrote:
Quad list it as a 4V battery - quite how they achieve that is another question altogether! ** Quad have " 4.8V NiCd " printed on the schem next to it. It might be the charger's nominal upper voltage limit for a 3 cell NiCd (blue) or 3 cell NiMH (green) battery. Constant current charging of either type results in a 'resting voltage' immediately after going off charge in the region of 1.4 volts per cell, usually dropping to 1.36 volts after a day or two. The 1.2 volts rating for these cells is the minimum voltage just prior to becoming exhausted of useful charge. ** The rest voltage of a NiCd cell is 1.25V - under a moderate load it drops to 1.2v and is exhausted at 1.1V. When trickle charged in memory back up use, there is just enough charge to compensate for internal self discharge - normally about C/50. So for a nominal 150mAh cell, that equates to a 3mA trickle charge. A good condition, 4 cell pack ought to measure between 4.8 and 5V. Same goes for NiMh cells. ..... Phil |
Quad FM4 Battery
On 26/02/2016 07:02, Phil Allison wrote:
Johnny B Good wrote: Quad list it as a 4V battery - quite how they achieve that is another question altogether! ** Quad have " 4.8V NiCd " printed on the schem next to it. It might be the charger's nominal upper voltage limit for a 3 cell NiCd (blue) or 3 cell NiMH (green) battery. Constant current charging of either type results in a 'resting voltage' immediately after going off charge in the region of 1.4 volts per cell, usually dropping to 1.36 volts after a day or two. The 1.2 volts rating for these cells is the minimum voltage just prior to becoming exhausted of useful charge. ** The rest voltage of a NiCd cell is 1.25V - under a moderate load it drops to 1.2v and is exhausted at 1.1V. When trickle charged in memory back up use, there is just enough charge to compensate for internal self discharge - normally about C/50. So for a nominal 150mAh cell, that equates to a 3mA trickle charge. A good condition, 4 cell pack ought to measure between 4.8 and 5V. This one reads 4.6V. I've been in touch with the seller. I've had a couple of messages. Last week's was 'I'll sort it next week'. This week's is the same ;-) It turns out that he hasn't (he says) used the tuner for some years. -- Cheers, Rob |
Quad FM4 Battery
"RJH" wrote in message ... On 26/02/2016 07:02, Phil Allison wrote: Johnny B Good wrote: Quad list it as a 4V battery - quite how they achieve that is another question altogether! ** Quad have " 4.8V NiCd " printed on the schem next to it. It might be the charger's nominal upper voltage limit for a 3 cell NiCd (blue) or 3 cell NiMH (green) battery. Constant current charging of either type results in a 'resting voltage' immediately after going off charge in the region of 1.4 volts per cell, usually dropping to 1.36 volts after a day or two. The 1.2 volts rating for these cells is the minimum voltage just prior to becoming exhausted of useful charge. ** The rest voltage of a NiCd cell is 1.25V - under a moderate load it drops to 1.2v and is exhausted at 1.1V. When trickle charged in memory back up use, there is just enough charge to compensate for internal self discharge - normally about C/50. So for a nominal 150mAh cell, that equates to a 3mA trickle charge. A good condition, 4 cell pack ought to measure between 4.8 and 5V. This one reads 4.6V. I've been in touch with the seller. I've had a couple of messages. Last week's was 'I'll sort it next week'. This week's is the same ;-) It turns out that he hasn't (he says) used the tuner for some years. The truth will out............... -- Woody harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com |
Quad FM4 Battery
On 26/02/2016 18:55, Woody wrote:
"RJH" wrote in message ... On 26/02/2016 07:02, Phil Allison wrote: Johnny B Good wrote: Quad list it as a 4V battery - quite how they achieve that is another question altogether! ** Quad have " 4.8V NiCd " printed on the schem next to it. It might be the charger's nominal upper voltage limit for a 3 cell NiCd (blue) or 3 cell NiMH (green) battery. Constant current charging of either type results in a 'resting voltage' immediately after going off charge in the region of 1.4 volts per cell, usually dropping to 1.36 volts after a day or two. The 1.2 volts rating for these cells is the minimum voltage just prior to becoming exhausted of useful charge. ** The rest voltage of a NiCd cell is 1.25V - under a moderate load it drops to 1.2v and is exhausted at 1.1V. When trickle charged in memory back up use, there is just enough charge to compensate for internal self discharge - normally about C/50. So for a nominal 150mAh cell, that equates to a 3mA trickle charge. A good condition, 4 cell pack ought to measure between 4.8 and 5V. This one reads 4.6V. I've been in touch with the seller. I've had a couple of messages. Last week's was 'I'll sort it next week'. This week's is the same ;-) It turns out that he hasn't (he says) used the tuner for some years. The truth will out............... I wish. At first he admitted (by email) that he hadn't used the tuner for some time - 'forgotten when I last used it'. Now he's adamant that it worked at the time of sale. He's willing to give me a £30 refund, but I'm not overly happy about that so I may take it to the ebay dispute thingy. Problem being I can't prove either way, it may have taken a knock in transit - although his dishonesty is now on record, so that might help. On the up-side, had an email from Quad - £48 plus VAT fixed labour charge, plus parts and postage, to 'full working specification'. That seems like a very good deal, so I may take them up on that. Still a bit cross that I paid for a 'very nice' FM4. -- Cheers, Rob |
Quad FM4 Battery
The truth will out............... I wish. At first he admitted (by email) that he hadn't used the tuner for some time - 'forgotten when I last used it'. Now he's adamant that it worked at the time of sale. He's willing to give me a £30 refund, but I'm not overly happy about that so I may take it to the ebay dispute thingy. Problem being I can't prove either way, it may have taken a knock in transit - although his dishonesty is now on record, so that might help. On the up-side, had an email from Quad - £48 plus VAT fixed labour charge, plus parts and postage, to 'full working specification'. That seems like a very good deal, so I may take them up on that. That is a very good deal!... Still a bit cross that I paid for a 'very nice' FM4. What was actually wrong with it again?.. -- Tony Sayer |
Quad FM4 Battery
On 02/03/2016 21:33, tony sayer wrote:
The truth will out............... I wish. At first he admitted (by email) that he hadn't used the tuner for some time - 'forgotten when I last used it'. Now he's adamant that it worked at the time of sale. He's willing to give me a £30 refund, but I'm not overly happy about that so I may take it to the ebay dispute thingy. Problem being I can't prove either way, it may have taken a knock in transit - although his dishonesty is now on record, so that might help. On the up-side, had an email from Quad - £48 plus VAT fixed labour charge, plus parts and postage, to 'full working specification'. That seems like a very good deal, so I may take them up on that. That is a very good deal!... Unless they do anything silly with parts costs I suppose. But I'm inclined to trust them. Still a bit cross that I paid for a 'very nice' FM4. What was actually wrong with it again?.. No audio out. All lights up with a good signal. -- Cheers, Rob |
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