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Attach Wires to NMH Batteries Without Soldering

Hi,
Do you know a technique to safely attach wires to NMH batteries
("C" cells) without soldering the wires to the battery which may harm the
batteries integrity? Note: I have several new "C" NMH batteries.

I know about battery holders, but there isn't enough space for a
multi-cell battery holder in the project I am working on.

Thank You in advance, John
 
W

William Sommerwerck

Jan 1, 1970
0
Welding.

A Batteries Plus store will do it for a small charge -- or sometimes free if
you buy enough stuff. The store near Southcenter fixed the broken weld in my
B&D battery pack.
 
N

N_Cook

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,
Do you know a technique to safely attach wires to NMH batteries
("C" cells) without soldering the wires to the battery which may harm the
batteries integrity? Note: I have several new "C" NMH batteries.

I know about battery holders, but there isn't enough space for a
multi-cell battery holder in the project I am working on.

Thank You in advance, John


Whats wrong with soldereing? Seriously roughen the metal with coarse sand
paper then a blob of flux. Then a soldering iron greater than 50W and
locally heat enough to get a spot of solder wetted over the roughened area,
don't dally and heat the whole cell. Then at your leisure and ordinary iron
locally melt a bit of your solder blob and meld with some new solder and the
wire. If its for >5 or 10A use then probably not advisable

practise on an old cell first , perhaps
 
H

hr(bob) [email protected]

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,
      Do you know a technique to safely attach wires to NMH batteries
("C" cells) without soldering the wires to the battery which may harm the
batteries integrity?   Note: I have several new "C" NMH batteries.

      I know about battery holders, but there isn't enough space for a
multi-cell battery holder in the project I am working on.

                Thank You in advance, John

Do what Mr. Cook suggests, it is what I frequently do.
 
N

N_Cook

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,
Do you know a technique to safely attach wires to NMH batteries
("C" cells) without soldering the wires to the battery which may harm the
batteries integrity? Note: I have several new "C" NMH batteries.

I know about battery holders, but there isn't enough space for a
multi-cell battery holder in the project I am working on.

Thank You in advance, John

Do what Mr. Cook suggests, it is what I frequently do.

+++

I must have done it a few dozen times , admittedly NiCads, but no in
service problems emerged over time scale of a few years anyway.
 
I

Ian Malcolm

Jan 1, 1970
0
N_Cook said:
Do what Mr. Cook suggests, it is what I frequently do.

+++

I must have done it a few dozen times , admittedly NiCads, but no in
service problems emerged over time scale of a few years anyway.
Me too. The worry is: that you might melt some plastic internal seperator
or similar. NiMH batteries can be stored at -20 deg C so you can put the
cells in the freezer beforehand to give yourself a bit more safety margin,
but if you are any good at soldering that really isn't required. Whatever
you do, don't piss about with a low wattage iron or a fine tip. This is a
perfect job for a 100W Weller soldering gun or a catalytic butane gas iron.

I usually roughen up the contact with a fiberglass brush pencil. Its
absolutely essential to break through any Nickel plating that may be there.

This is safe enough for NiCd/NiMH but *NOT* reccomended for LiPO cells as
you risk turning them into an incendary devicee. [;)]
 
B

Bob E.

Jan 1, 1970
0
Do what Mr. Cook suggests, it is what I frequently do.

I second this. I've done this several times with "non-replaceable" cells in
shavers, etc. and have had no failures related to quick-soldering, only the
usual slow degradation over time of the cell chemistry.

Tin the wire, emery-paper the terminals, clean, drop of flux, quick solder.
 
M

mike

Jan 1, 1970
0
Whats wrong with soldereing? Seriously roughen the metal with coarse sand
paper then a blob of flux. Then a soldering iron greater than 50W and
locally heat enough to get a spot of solder wetted over the roughened area,
don't dally and heat the whole cell. Then at your leisure and ordinary iron
locally melt a bit of your solder blob and meld with some new solder and the
wire. If its for>5 or 10A use then probably not advisable

practise on an old cell first , perhaps
Soldering directly to cells is a bad idea.
It's like driving above the speed limit. You won't have any problem finding
people who'll swear that they do it all the time. They never get caught...
until they do.
Go down to traffic court and you'll see the other side of the coin.

I've soldered a lot of NiCd's back in the day. It mostly worked.
Except for the few that exploded under charge. And the few that
had high self-discharge rates.

And if you're fixing a laptop battery pack, there really isn't room
for that solder joint.

You need to find the sweet spot of time and temperature.
I found that spot with a DIY battery tab welder.
Haven't had any battery problems since.

If you insist on soldering batteries, wear safety glasses.
Clamp them down so they
won't hit you in the face when they explode. Also helps to
have them in a fixed position. You don't have time to fiddle
with the cells and the wire and the solder and the iron
with only two hands. The separator melts before you get
it all lined up.

Did I mention that soldering directly to cells is a bad idea.
 
A

Andy

Jan 1, 1970
0
I second this. I've done this several times with "non-replaceable" cells in
shavers, etc. and have had no failures related to quick-soldering, only the
usual slow degradation over time of the cell chemistry.

Tin the wire, emery-paper the terminals, clean, drop of flux, quick solder.

Also, use fairly small wire for the attachment and put a tiny blob
of solder on the wire to be attached... Then a quick touch with
the iron will melt both blobs together. The secret is minimum heat
and time, but it is easy to do...... and be sure to use the
emery paper on the batt terminals first....
 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
Do you know a technique to safely attach wires to NMH batteries
("C" cells) without soldering the wires to the battery which may harm the
batteries integrity?


** The industry standard method is a special form of spot welding using two,
close spaced electrodes.

You can get NiMH cells with welded, metal tags already attached - and solder
these.

Otherwise use ordinary soldering - like thousands do.

For battery packs subjected to high discharge rates, soldering produces
reliable, low resistance connections and spot welding does not.


..... Phil
 
W

William Sommerwerck

Jan 1, 1970
0
You can get NiMH cells with welded, metal tags already
attached -- and solder these.

But they're still welded -- which you condemn for high-drain apps:

"For battery packs subjected to high discharge rates, soldering produces
reliable, low resistance connections and spot welding does not."
 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
"William Sommerwanker = Utter Fuckwit"
But they're still welded -- which you condemn for high-drain apps:


** Your bullshit words - not mine arsehole.


BTW:

Got any idea what is the OP's app is ??

Got any idea why you fat head is permanently stuck up your arse ??

Rhetorical question -

everyone already knows the answer to that, except you.

You stupid pile a ASD fucked shit.
 
"William Sommerwanker =  Utter Fuckwit"





**  Your bullshit words  -  not mine arsehole.

BTW:

Got any idea what is the OP's app is  ??

Got any idea why you fat head is permanently stuck up your arse  ??

Rhetorical question -

everyone already knows the answer to that,  except you.

You stupid pile a ASD fucked shit.

No Phil, they were YOUR words from YOUR previous post dated December
20 at 7:41 PM

"For battery packs subjected to high discharge rates, soldering
produces
reliable, low resistance connections and spot welding does not.

..... Phil"

Look in the mirror when calling names because they apply to you as
well.

Merry Christmas

 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
** Your bullshit words - not mine arsehole.

BTW:

Got any idea what is the OP's app is ??

Got any idea why you fat head is permanently stuck up your arse ??

Rhetorical question -

everyone already knows the answer to that, except you.

You stupid pile a ASD fucked shit.


No Phil, they were YOUR words ...


** Anyone alive can see they were not.

" For battery packs subjected to high discharge rates, soldering
produces reliable, low resistance connections and spot welding does not."


** Different words & with a different meaning.

Now go **** your mother, you pile of putrid trolling garbage.
 
W

William Sommerwerck

Jan 1, 1970
0
"For battery packs subjected to high discharge rates, soldering
produces reliable, low resistance connections and spot welding does not."

** Different words & with a different meaning.

Ya coulda fooled me.

"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, "it means
just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less."

"The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many
different things."

"The question is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master — that's all."
 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
"William Sommerwanker = TROLL "
"For battery packs subjected to high discharge rates, soldering
produces reliable, low resistance connections and spot welding does not."

** Different words & with a different meaning.

Ya could fooled me.


** Anyone could fool a tenth witted, ASD fucked **** like you.
 
W

William Sommerwerck

Jan 1, 1970
0
"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message
You still clinging to those worthless fantasies, I see. Tell me about
all your work for Australia's space program...

I know you're speaking to Phil, but I worked on the American space program in
Australia, installing and tuning a new klystron at the Orroral Valley site.

With respect to the American space programl... While working for RCA, I nearly
destroyed one of the TIROS satellites. I don't remember whether it was 6 or
7...
 
W

William Sommerwerck

Jan 1, 1970
0
I know you're speaking to Phil, but I worked on the American space program
Do you remember how many watts it handled?

I believe the maximum output was 20kW. They were built by Varian whose chief
engineer was one Mr Goldfinger. Really. He gave me the clue I needed to figure
out why we couldn't tune the klystrons.
 
G

gregz

Jan 1, 1970
0
William Sommerwerck said:
I believe the maximum output was 20kW. They were built by Varian whose
chief engineer was one Mr Goldfinger. Really. He gave me the clue I
needed to figure out why we couldn't tune the klystrons.

Some guys could fiddle with those forever. I thought it was 10kw but might
be wrong.

Greg
 
W

William Sommerwerck

Jan 1, 1970
0
"Jon Elson" wrote in message
Well, that sounds like it could be one of those "tales from the cube"
stories on the back page of EDN. Tell us more, if you can!

Both satellites used dual, identical computers, with one backing up the other.
The software was periodically modified or updated, and I was assigned to write
the step-by-step instructions for a change.

Although my work was checked by other people, they made the same mistake I
did. I assumed that, because one of the satellites did not perform a checksum
on that section of program memory, neither did the other one. But it did.

The result was that, shortly after the update, the checksum was performed,
wasn't correct, and the computer shut down. For reasons I never understood,
the backup computer also shut down. (This was an intentional part of the
design.)

I quickly figured out what was going on, and my boss complimented me (which he
shouldn't have -- he should have chewed me out). No one was fired, or even
reprimanded. I suspect this sort of mistake was not uncommon.

The satellite was "fixed" by sending commands to reload and restart the
computers.
 
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