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FrozenGate by Avery

Li-ion or Lipo battery source

Joined
Sep 11, 2011
Messages
249
Points
18
I need some lithium ion or lithium polymer batteries to power my laser. What are some reputable suppliers? I need batteries that can handle at least 4A constant current.
 
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What size? Hobby king has good RC style battery packs.
 
Hmm I was looking for something like this but with a higher constant current draw rating. Do you think I should just buy from Chinese suppliers or is that a bad idea?
 
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Found this 6Ah , 65~130C Discharge , more than the 4A max discharge you wanted but similar size and capable of it .

Turnigy nano-tech A-SPEC 6000mah 1S 65~130C Hardcase Lipo Pack

Capacity: 6000mAh
Voltage: 1S2P / 1 Cell / 3.7V
Discharge: 65C Constant / 130C Burst
Weight: 143g (including wire, plug & case)
Dimensions: 93x47x18mm
Balance Plug: JST-XH
Discharge Plug: 4mm Bullet-connector to HXT4mm

Looks pretty good thanks! Max constant discharge rate = 65C = 6Ah*65 = 390A? That seems quite high.
 
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Yup. The cells are designed for low internal resistance, allows for high current draws.

I guess RC motors require really high current draws. I was just surprised that it was this high.

This should work, thanks all!
 
These can be quite high indeed. Normal operation on these things could be a flight time of 5 to 10 minutes so the discharge on average already needs to be 12C or so. This is however the average during that flight, at peak moments it could be a fair bit more so a (peak) 65C rating is not unrealistic.

For lasers you'd probably not use this much power, unless you wanted to make something really small with a thermally limited runtime and batteries to match.
 
These can be quite high indeed. Normal operation on these things could be a flight time of 5 to 10 minutes so the discharge on average already needs to be 12C or so. This is however the average during that flight, at peak moments it could be a fair bit more so a (peak) 65C rating is not unrealistic.

For lasers you'd probably not use this much power, unless you wanted to make something really small with a thermally limited runtime and batteries to match.

I calculated that I'd use at most 5A. I guess the higher limit doesn't have any downsides though. Though, maybe those new 40W blue diode arrays would need on the orders of 100A?
 





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