DE9118 this was and is Ni-Cd (for Ni-Cad only) exclusive charger, and therefore for the ones not using Ni-Cd cells this is unwanted stock.
At my fresh application, I did a combination of eight still working but aged Ni-Cd.
Sixteen Ni-Cd tested, the best ones are now installed at my second Bosch 9.6V battery pack.
Now I am investigating best method to top-up this battery pack as much as possible.I did try as first regular pulse charging, due my Bosch charger, but this it did not go that well.
This pulse charger uses regular transformer and pulse circuit, the regular transformer creates a permanent amount of heat, no matter if this is at low current pulsing mode.
Old Ni-Cd they dislike this heat as it grow their own internal resistance and they cannot absorb energy more than up to a point.
Here comes in the game the DE9118 along of one accessory from Bosch, this is the non-smart battery charging port which is for 300mA constant current.
I did use my magic and a third thermistor contact point added and now any fast charger can sense the thermistor and start
fast charging by the use of this battery holder.
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By having the battery pack away of any heating source, the amount of battery voltage absorption this increased, which is good.
But I thought to elevate my game at an upper level, now I am using for a test, pulse charge and active battery pack cooling, due external 230V AC Fan (120x120 mm).
By the use of 8846A and logging software, I do now monitor charging voltage absorption, and even discovered all DE9118 secrets.
DE9118 has non-load voltage output at 49.2V
DE9118 at charging mode deliver 1.4A, and stops charging every 60 seconds so this to measure battery voltage.
When this charger perform three measurement’s in which the voltage now decreases ( due the fact that battery pack cannot absorb the incoming energy and turn itself in to resistor), then the charger switch to low power charging.
When DE9118 this does Low power charging, at every 10 seconds a pulse of 1.4A this delivered at the battery pack.
The amount of energy absorption, this is now relative at actual battery pack internal resistance, along of the room temperature.
Room temperature this is at 17 Celsius at midday and drops at 14C at night.
With active cooling, at 17C the battery pack this maintain external (body) temperature of 21C at slow charge.
My new task this is to monitor battery pack voltage for several hours and even overnight, so to gain awareness if this unusual charging method does offer any benefits in comparison to the ancient of 300mA charging for several hours.
At slow charge with 300mA CC, the battery pack voltage did not succeed to elevate more than 11.482 V overnight.
Currently I am logging voltage spikes, when the pulse strike the pack, the average voltage after the first hour this at 10.882V and I hope to see this increasing within the next 16 hours.
Max spike 11.717V
Average 10.882V
Minimum 10.572
Now I have to wait for 16 hours so to collect and analyze the data.
Only then a verdict will be possible.