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Help! Building homemade photo lithium battery tester

Hello, and Happy New Year to everybody.

My battery tester uses a (too weak) 10mA load for its 6V test.

I'm guessing that a 2CR5 Photo Lithium battery should be tested at
150mA, under load.

Any electronics geniuses out there? What type/size resistor should I
connect to the battery, while testing with my battery meter, to
simulate a Canon SLR's load, and provide me with an estimation of the
usability of my 2CR5 (and other 6V lithium) batteries?
I also have a DMM.

Thanks for all advise and tips.
 
J

John Woodgate

Jan 1, 1970
0
I read in sci.electronics.design that [email protected] wrote (in
Hello, and Happy New Year to everybody.

My battery tester uses a (too weak) 10mA load for its 6V test.

I'm guessing that a 2CR5 Photo Lithium battery should be tested at
150mA, under load.

Any electronics geniuses out there? What type/size resistor should I
connect to the battery, while testing with my battery meter, to
simulate a Canon SLR's load, and provide me with an estimation of the
usability of my 2CR5 (and other 6V lithium) batteries?
I also have a DMM.

Thanks for all advise and tips.
To get 150 mA with 6 V, you need 6 V/0.15 A = 40 ohms. Power dissipated
is 6 V x 150 mA = 0.9 W. If you are not going to keep the tester on the
battery for more than a minute or so, a 39 ohm 1 W resistor is OK. 39
ohms is a standard value; 40 ohms isn't. It will get warm, but not too
warm.
 
M

Mark Jones

Jan 1, 1970
0
John said:
I read in sci.electronics.design that [email protected] wrote (in


To get 150 mA with 6 V, you need 6 V/0.15 A = 40 ohms. Power dissipated
is 6 V x 150 mA = 0.9 W. If you are not going to keep the tester on the
battery for more than a minute or so, a 39 ohm 1 W resistor is OK. 39
ohms is a standard value; 40 ohms isn't. It will get warm, but not too
warm.


Also, depending on the battery used, I'm not sure 150mA is a good
idea. Some Li-ion batteries have a maximum steady-state current below
100mA. If this is the case, the readings will be erronious. Perhaps
this is why 10mA is used by default.
 
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