If you press on the “bubble” does it give way easily?This is one of my oldest batteries and has just finished charging.
Is it puffed?
Yes to all your questions and still fly with it, thank you (My comment)If you press on the “bubble” does it give way easily?
Are you able to slide it in and out of the aircraft without it rubbing or binding?
Are the cells balanced in voltage and internal resistance?
If you answered yes to all three then they are most likely fine to use.
If the bubble gets hard, the battery starts rubbing or binding, or the cells don’t balance then it is time to retire that battery.
The bubble is very slight, it doesn't protrude beyond the case or rub on the aircraft.The bubble isn't hard. I can press it with only a little pressure.
How can I check the balance and resistance? I have a multimeter.
All you need is a load, a lamp or a resistor. You can measure cell voltage without load but this is not really helpful. Cell voltage can be measured on the balancer pins.How can I check the balance and resistance? I have a multimeter.
I also used a tenergy to try and measure IR and get a very different reading every time,all on same battery same cells etc. and sometimes way off the charts. Junk, I agree. Have a great charger does all but IR. Need a meter just for IR also. Any suggestions ? KCPaul,
You can check the voltage balance quite easily using a multimeter. The attached file shows an H480 battery, but the same scheme is used on the H Plus battery where the balance contacts are mini Dean’s instead of the round contacts.
You can google methods to measure IR of the battery cells using a multimeter and a known load, but it is better to use a quality third party charger that can give you cell voltages and IR readings, as well as, do balance charging and place packs at storage level.
Tenergy has a small battery tester that is okay for cell voltages, but the IR measurement was badly defective on two that I tried and their tech support was useless. In both the first and last cells always measured excessively high and the middle cells were lower than normal. Suggests to me there is a design issue that needs to be addressed.
It will recover once current draw is reduced. That is called rebound. If you start the motors you will see the percentage drop faster than normal. With the H+ it is harder to see that because the motors disarm after 10 to 15 seconds without launching.I haven't tested the battery as suggested. My multimeter is dead and hasn't been replaced. Something else odd has happened. I got stuck with charged batteries because the weather turned before I could fly yesterday. This morning, between storms, I was just flying low level along my road to try and burn off some charge. I had been maneuvering for about 5 minutes when the weather went bad again so we landed, shut down and came indoors. Once inside, I powered up tge drone and controller to see how much power used up, but the controller reported the drone at 99% battery! Is this normal
Ah right, that makes sense, thank you. At the moment, the drone is sitting on the table with the camera on (not motors, obv) and it's draining slowly. That method will; have to do for now.It will recover once current draw is reduced. That is called rebound. If you start the motors you will see the percentage drop faster than normal. With the H+ it is harder to see that because the motors disarm after 10 to 15 seconds without launching.
No, it doesn't rub. I flew it this morning without incident, though it was just a 'discharge' flight. Quite low level and back and forth.As long as the battery is not rubbing when inserted, it does not necessarily need to be retired entirely. It can still be used for non-flight operations, such as calibrations or sitting to update the GPS satellite almanac.
Just be sure to clearly label the battery as "non-flight". This way you can maximize your other batteries for actual flight cycles.
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