"Building" a discharger
#1
"Building" a discharger
Hi people,
I see most of the discharge kits for grid chargers are just incandescent light bulbs. What are the requirements for such a device?
how many watts should the bulb be? Is that really as simple as it is? Just a steady load which most use a light bulb t provide? What characteristics should the load have?
And what is 1C for a HCH I battery?
And if i buy a Prolong device which is "discharge ready" what will hooking up my home made discharger entail?
I see most of the discharge kits for grid chargers are just incandescent light bulbs. What are the requirements for such a device?
how many watts should the bulb be? Is that really as simple as it is? Just a steady load which most use a light bulb t provide? What characteristics should the load have?
And what is 1C for a HCH I battery?
And if i buy a Prolong device which is "discharge ready" what will hooking up my home made discharger entail?
Last edited by dosmastr; 04-02-2017 at 03:56 PM.
#2
Re: "Building" a discharger
Hi people,
I see most of the discharge kits for grid chargers are just incandescent light bulbs. What are the requirements for such a device?
how many watts should the bulb be? Is that really as simple as it is? Just a steady load which most use a light bulb t provide? What characteristics should the load have?
And what is 1C for a HCH I battery?
And if i buy a Prolong device which is "discharge ready" what will hooking up my home made discharger entail?
I see most of the discharge kits for grid chargers are just incandescent light bulbs. What are the requirements for such a device?
how many watts should the bulb be? Is that really as simple as it is? Just a steady load which most use a light bulb t provide? What characteristics should the load have?
And what is 1C for a HCH I battery?
And if i buy a Prolong device which is "discharge ready" what will hooking up my home made discharger entail?
The easy answer is to buy an HA discharger and follow their discharge recommendations on their website. Yeah, I know it seems like a lot to pay for a block of wood and some bits, but you're paying for about $20 of materials and time. The connector alone is a few bucks, and the tool necessary to properly crimp the pins is about $200.
If you don't want to pay for the discharger, HA may sell you the harness and you can make your own.
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