Troll-feeding Senile Asshole Alert!...

Commander Kinsey Cunthead :
=======================

THE WALL WART LIMITS THE CURRENT AND PREVENTS ANY ISSUES FROM A SINGLE SHORTED CELL.

Is that clear?

Yes, so why have the semiconductor fuse at all?

** If more or most cells are shorted.

FUCKHEAD !!

Happens with NiCds.
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 02:56:31 -0000, \"Commander Kinsey\"
<CK1@nospam.com> wrote:

On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 00:42:20 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.deletethisbit@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 7:39:08 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 23:59:33 -0000, <jla...@highlandsniptechnology.com> wrote:

On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 22:47:41 -0000, \"Commander Kinsey\"
C...@nospam.com> wrote:

On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 21:56:55 -0000, jkn <jkn...@nicorp.f9.co.uk> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 9:16:58 PM UTC, Custos Custodum wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 12:52:31 -0800 (PST), jkn <jkn...@nicorp.f9.co.uk
wrote:
On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 8:33:42 PM UTC, Commander Kinsey wrote:
https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is only connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass DC current to allow the battery to charge?

What else might that yellow thing be, other than a capacitor?

A thermistor or a VDR, to provide current limiting.
Regarding operation, power diodes tend to have a higher Vf than small
signal diodes or transistor junctions, so once the diode goes into
conduction it produces a large enough voltage to turn on the
transistor and the red LED, indicating that charging is taking place.
The green LED merely indicates that power is applied to the circuit.

My (probably futile) hope was that he might answer it himself,
or at least try to...

I didn\'t expect two completely different devices to look identical. So how the fuck am I supposed to tell which one is?

Try an ohmmeter.
Not so easy when in the middle of a big circuit.

One end of it is connected only to the battery which I believe you can remove.

In this case yes, but I was talking generically in other larger circuits where the capacitor/limiter could be in the middle of loads of other components.

You could

Think hard about it

or

Ohm out all around it and solve the puzzle

or

Unsolder and measure

or

Maybe look up the part number, if it\'s public. Lots of part numbers
aren\'t.





--

I yam what I yam - Popeye
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 21:55:04 +0100, Peeler <trolltrap@valid.invalid>
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:33:34 -0000, Birdbrain Macaw (aka \"Commander Kinsey\",
\"James Wilkinson\", \"Steven Wanker\",\"Bruce Farquar\", \"Fred Johnson, etc.),
the pathological resident idiot and attention whore of all the uk ngs,
blathered again:

FLUSH the subnormal sociopathic trolling attention whore\'s latest
attention-baiting sick bullshit unread again

He asked a reasonable, on-topic for S.E.D. question.

It may be a PTC thermistor current limiter.



--

I yam what I yam - Popeye
 
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote
Rick C <gnuarm.deletethisbit@gmail.com> wrote
On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 7:47:42 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey
wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 00:10:47 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.del...@gmail.com
wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 6:08:03 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey
wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 23:02:03 -0000, Rick C
gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 5:34:04 PM UTC-5, Commander
Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:55:51 -0000, Rick C
gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 3:33:49 PM UTC-5, Commander
Kinsey wrote:
https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is
only connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass
DC current to allow the battery to charge?

Maybe it\'s an AC battery? They are very useful for grid
storage applications as long as you can control the phase.

What makes you think that component is a capacitor? I\'m
assuming you drew the schematic.
I\'ve learned from someone on Quora that it\'s actually a PTC Fuse
- a resettable semiconductor fuse.

The second image in the link shows a brown disk, which I thought
was a ceramic capacitor. Looks like it\'s to stop a busted battery from
being overcharged when a cell has died.

It won\'t do that. It is simply a fuse that prevents too high a
current from flowing, such as if you connected the battery backwards.
Surely a higher current would flow if the battery became 9 cells
instead of 10 because one failed and became zero volts? Ever tried
charging a car battery with 14V when it only contains 5 working cells?
The others boil.
I\'m not sure what this circuit is supposed to do. It doesn\'t look
right to me.
It\'s the (5 hour) charger for a very cheap cordless drill. The
input is a 14.4V wall wart. The output is to a pack of NiCad cells.
It\'s worked fine for years, until I can no longer find replacement
NiCad cells, so I\'m converting the battery packs to LiIon.

My point is this circuit isn\'t setting the voltage or limiting
current other than through the fuse.
It will be limited by the wall wart, which is a basic transformer and
diodes. Since it\'s a 5 hour charge, it won\'t harm the battery to just
keep going.
It appears to be a couple of LEDs that indicate the battery is
charging and/or has power.
Yes, the battery is basically just charged through the diode and fuse.
The diode will prevent the transistor from ever turning on more than
a tiny amount, but with the gain of the transistor the red LED is
turned on with a small current in the transistor BE path. It could be
more clear if you redraw it with the base on the right, the resistor
to the right of that and the diode across the two. The two resistors
and the green LED probably should be on the left, where power comes
in. That\'s all they do is indicate the presence of power.
Yeah it was just a quick sketch to try to understand it.
In any event, it is the wall wart that would seem to be doing all
the work of charging the battery, setting the max current and the max
voltage just by having a significant series resistance most likely.
Ah, you beat me to it.
That\'s why the fuse is not needed for a shorted cell. Being at 11V
instead of 14V isn\'t enough to make the current jump so much. A short
or reversed battery is a different matter.
Unless NiCads are vastly different to car batteries, one shorted cell
makes a hell of a lot more current flow.

THE WALL WART LIMITS THE CURRENT AND PREVENTS ANY ISSUES FROM A SINGLE
SHORTED CELL.

Is that clear?

Yes, so why have the semiconductor fuse at all?

In case the jumper leads going to the battery being charged are shorted
together, stupid.
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 03:13:08 -0000, Fredxx <fredxx@spam.uk> wrote:

On 14/02/2022 03:04, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 01:24:36 -0000, Rick C
gnuarm.deletethisbit@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 7:47:42 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 00:10:47 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.del...@gmail.com
wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 6:08:03 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey
wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 23:02:03 -0000, Rick C
gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 5:34:04 PM UTC-5, Commander
Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:55:51 -0000, Rick C
gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 3:33:49 PM UTC-5, Commander
Kinsey wrote:
https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is
only connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass
DC current to allow the battery to charge?

Maybe it\'s an AC battery? They are very useful for grid
storage applications as long as you can control the phase.

What makes you think that component is a capacitor? I\'m
assuming you drew the schematic.
I\'ve learned from someone on Quora that it\'s actually a PTC
Fuse - a resettable semiconductor fuse.

The second image in the link shows a brown disk, which I
thought was a ceramic capacitor. Looks like it\'s to stop a busted
battery from being overcharged when a cell has died.

It won\'t do that. It is simply a fuse that prevents too high a
current from flowing, such as if you connected the battery backwards.
Surely a higher current would flow if the battery became 9 cells
instead of 10 because one failed and became zero volts? Ever tried
charging a car battery with 14V when it only contains 5 working
cells? The others boil.
I\'m not sure what this circuit is supposed to do. It doesn\'t
look right to me.
It\'s the (5 hour) charger for a very cheap cordless drill. The
input is a 14.4V wall wart. The output is to a pack of NiCad cells.
It\'s worked fine for years, until I can no longer find replacement
NiCad cells, so I\'m converting the battery packs to LiIon.

My point is this circuit isn\'t setting the voltage or limiting
current other than through the fuse.
It will be limited by the wall wart, which is a basic transformer and
diodes. Since it\'s a 5 hour charge, it won\'t harm the battery to just
keep going.
It appears to be a couple of LEDs that indicate the battery is
charging and/or has power.
Yes, the battery is basically just charged through the diode and fuse.
The diode will prevent the transistor from ever turning on more
than a tiny amount, but with the gain of the transistor the red LED
is turned on with a small current in the transistor BE path. It could
be more clear if you redraw it with the base on the right, the
resistor to the right of that and the diode across the two. The two
resistors and the green LED probably should be on the left, where
power comes in. That\'s all they do is indicate the presence of power.
Yeah it was just a quick sketch to try to understand it.
In any event, it is the wall wart that would seem to be doing all
the work of charging the battery, setting the max current and the max
voltage just by having a significant series resistance most likely.
Ah, you beat me to it.
That\'s why the fuse is not needed for a shorted cell. Being at 11V
instead of 14V isn\'t enough to make the current jump so much. A short
or reversed battery is a different matter.
Unless NiCads are vastly different to car batteries, one shorted cell
makes a hell of a lot more current flow.

THE WALL WART LIMITS THE CURRENT AND PREVENTS ANY ISSUES FROM A SINGLE
SHORTED CELL.

Is that clear?

Yes, so why have the semiconductor fuse at all?

[other groups reinstated to stop you limiting the audience - others may
be reading this in another group]
Oh, you use google groups. My god man get a newsreader program.

Why would anyone want to read your posts?

You ask stupid questions and don\'t understand the replies.

I understood the answer perfectly, what makes you think I didn\'t?
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 04:30:57 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.deletethisbit@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 10:04:23 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 01:24:36 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 7:47:42 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 00:10:47 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 6:08:03 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 23:02:03 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 5:34:04 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:55:51 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.del...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 3:33:49 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is only connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass DC current to allow the battery to charge?

Maybe it\'s an AC battery? They are very useful for grid storage applications as long as you can control the phase.

What makes you think that component is a capacitor? I\'m assuming you drew the schematic.
I\'ve learned from someone on Quora that it\'s actually a PTC Fuse - a resettable semiconductor fuse.

The second image in the link shows a brown disk, which I thought was a ceramic capacitor. Looks like it\'s to stop a busted battery from being overcharged when a cell has died.

It won\'t do that. It is simply a fuse that prevents too high a current from flowing, such as if you connected the battery backwards.
Surely a higher current would flow if the battery became 9 cells instead of 10 because one failed and became zero volts? Ever tried charging a car battery with 14V when it only contains 5 working cells? The others boil.
I\'m not sure what this circuit is supposed to do. It doesn\'t look right to me.
It\'s the (5 hour) charger for a very cheap cordless drill. The input is a 14.4V wall wart. The output is to a pack of NiCad cells. It\'s worked fine for years, until I can no longer find replacement NiCad cells, so I\'m converting the battery packs to LiIon.

My point is this circuit isn\'t setting the voltage or limiting current other than through the fuse.
It will be limited by the wall wart, which is a basic transformer and diodes. Since it\'s a 5 hour charge, it won\'t harm the battery to just keep going.
It appears to be a couple of LEDs that indicate the battery is charging and/or has power.
Yes, the battery is basically just charged through the diode and fuse.
The diode will prevent the transistor from ever turning on more than a tiny amount, but with the gain of the transistor the red LED is turned on with a small current in the transistor BE path. It could be more clear if you redraw it with the base on the right, the resistor to the right of that and the diode across the two. The two resistors and the green LED probably should be on the left, where power comes in. That\'s all they do is indicate the presence of power.
Yeah it was just a quick sketch to try to understand it.
In any event, it is the wall wart that would seem to be doing all the work of charging the battery, setting the max current and the max voltage just by having a significant series resistance most likely.
Ah, you beat me to it.
That\'s why the fuse is not needed for a shorted cell. Being at 11V instead of 14V isn\'t enough to make the current jump so much. A short or reversed battery is a different matter.
Unless NiCads are vastly different to car batteries, one shorted cell makes a hell of a lot more current flow.

THE WALL WART LIMITS THE CURRENT AND PREVENTS ANY ISSUES FROM A SINGLE SHORTED CELL.

Is that clear?
Yes, so why have the semiconductor fuse at all?

[other groups reinstated to stop you limiting the audience - others may be reading this in another group]
Oh, you use google groups. My god man get a newsreader program.

As I said, when you reverse connect the battery, you double the voltage in the circuit. Rather than having a difference of a couple of volts in the EMF opposing the current, you now have a voltage that is perhaps 10 times that total. Yeah, that\'s going to push some unreasonable current though the power pack, so the fuse is needed.

Since the battery pack, like any cordless drill, has a semicircle shaped connector, it cannot possibly be connected backwards.

> Exactly which quirks where those?

Who said anything about quirks?
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:14:18 -0800, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:33:34 -0000, Birdbrain Macaw (aka \"Commander Kinsey\",
\"James Wilkinson\", \"Steven Wanker\",\"Bruce Farquar\", \"Fred Johnson, etc.),
the pathological resident idiot and attention whore of all the uk ngs,
blathered again:

FLUSH the subnormal sociopathic trolling attention whore\'s latest
attention-baiting sick bullshit unread again


He asked a reasonable, on-topic for S.E.D. question.

It may be a PTC thermistor current limiter.

He keeps trolling the shit out of these ngs, senile idiot. And you senile
cretins keep playing his game!
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 00:54:02 +0000, williamwright, another brain dead,
troll-feeding, senile asshole, blabbered:


They are vastly different.

Bill

His trolls have only one intent, troll-feeding senile moron!
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 14:03:34 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

<FLUSH the two subnormal sociopathic cretins\' endless absolutely idiotic
blather>

--
Another typical retarded conversation between our two village idiots,
Birdbrain and Rodent Speed:

Birdbrain: \"You beat me to it. Plain sex is boring.\"

Senile Rodent: \"Then fuck the cats. That wont be boring.\"

Birdbrain: \"Sell me a de-clawing tool first.\"

Senile Rodent: \"Wont help with the teeth.\"

Birdbrain: \"They\'ve never gone for me with their mouths.\"

Rodent Speed: \"They will if you are stupid enough to try fucking them.\"

Birdbrain: \"No, they always use claws.\"

Rodent Speed: \"They wont if you try fucking them. Try it and see.\"

Message-ID: <g3cjf7FavtgU1@mid.individual.net>
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 15:16:47 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

<FLUSH the two subnormal sociopathic cretins\' endless absolutely idiotic
blather>

--
Another typical retarded \"conversation\" between Birdbrain and senile Rodent:

Senile Rodent: \" Did you ever dig a hole to bury your own shit?\"

Birdbrain: \"I do if there\'s no flush toilet around.\"

Senile Rodent: \"Yeah, I prefer camping like that, off by myself with
no dunnys around and have always buried the shit.\"

MID: <fv66kaFml0nU2@mid.individual.net>
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 15:59:33 -0800, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com,
another mentally deficient, troll-feeding, senile asshole, blathered:


> Try an ohmmeter.

Try not to play that clinically insane troll\'s game, senile twit! <tsk>
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:11:04 -0800, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com,
another mentally deficient, troll-feeding senile twit, babbled again:

You could

Think hard about it

LOL Troll-feeding senile asshole still hasn\'t checked what\'s going on!
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 15:57:26 -0800, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com,
another mentally deficient, troll-feeding, senile asshole, blathered again:


> It can\'t. Maybe that yellow disk is not a capacitor.

Maybe that PROVEN clinically insane attention whore is just a trolling piece
of shit, senile twit? <VBG>
 
Its called a lossless charger. I encountered something like it in an old
pifco charging circuit in a torch. From what I could see one rectifier one
large capacitor and a small bleed resistor across the mains pins was all
supposed to charge two flat Ni-cads, and it was fine until the capacitor got
leaky, and the room filled with nasty smelling smoke.

I\'m just guessing here, since I cannot see your circuit, but it used to be a
very common practice for small rechargeable devices.
Brian

--

This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
briang1@blueyonder.co.uk
Blind user, so no pictures please
Note this Signature is meaningless.!
\"Commander Kinsey\" <CK1@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:eek:p.1hjp1807mvhs6z@ryzen.lan...
https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is only
connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass DC
current to allow the battery to charge?
 
Yes stop this silly childish response. Nobody is asking anyone else to read
every post are they?
Brian

--

This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
briang1@blueyonder.co.uk
Blind user, so no pictures please
Note this Signature is meaningless.!
<jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com> wrote in message
news:mklj0h96kjckuf3d3hb16pieejjvf0gofl@4ax.com...
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 21:55:04 +0100, Peeler <trolltrap@valid.invalid
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:33:34 -0000, Birdbrain Macaw (aka \"Commander
Kinsey\",
\"James Wilkinson\", \"Steven Wanker\",\"Bruce Farquar\", \"Fred Johnson, etc.),
the pathological resident idiot and attention whore of all the uk ngs,
blathered again:

FLUSH the subnormal sociopathic trolling attention whore\'s latest
attention-baiting sick bullshit unread again


He asked a reasonable, on-topic for S.E.D. question.

It may be a PTC thermistor current limiter.



--

I yam what I yam - Popeye
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 09:33:40 -0000, Brainless & Daft, the notorious,
troll-feeding senile idiot, blathered again:

Yes stop this silly childish response. Nobody is asking anyone else to read
every post are they?
Brainless & Daft

Says of course that idiotic sick senile asshole who will thankfully accept
ANY idiotic trollshit that gives him another opportunity to keep blathering
and gossiping about it endlessly! With useless idiots like you around,
\"euthanizing\" seems to be become an option worth considering.
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 09:30:20 -0000, Brainless & Daft, the notorious,
troll-feeding senile idiot, blathered again:

> Its called a lossless charger.

It\'s called a troll, senile cretin!
 
On 2/13/2022 5:33 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:55:51 -0000, Rick C <gnuarm.deletethisbit@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sunday, February 13, 2022 at 3:33:49 PM UTC-5, Commander Kinsey wrote:
https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is only connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass DC current to allow the battery to charge?

Maybe it\'s an AC battery?  They are very useful for grid storage applications as long as you can control the phase.

What makes you think that component is a capacitor?  I\'m assuming you drew the schematic.

I\'ve learned from someone on Quora that it\'s actually a PTC Fuse - a resettable semiconductor fuse.

The second image in the link shows a brown disk, which I thought was a ceramic capacitor.  Looks like it\'s to stop a busted battery from being overcharged when a cell has died.

The shape of the edge of the device,
hints that it is not a disc capacitor.

One reason for that, is the material the yellow
thing is dipped in, is a hell of a lot harder,
than the softer stuff used on the older disc caps.
The yellow material might be intended to be
flame proof or the like.

As a connoisseur of circuits, I bet you\'ve already
made up your mind as to whether this circuit is a
good idea or a bad idea...

Paul
 
On 13/02/2022 23:57, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
On Sun, 13 Feb 2022 20:33:34 -0000, \"Commander Kinsey\"
CK1@nospam.com> wrote:

https://imgur.com/a/b8l5qKQ

Look at the circuit diagram. The positive of the battery is only connected through a capacitor. How can a capacitor possibly pass DC current to allow the battery to charge?

It can\'t. Maybe that yellow disk is not a capacitor.



Thermistor more like


--
\"Corbyn talks about equality, justice, opportunity, health care, peace,
community, compassion, investment, security, housing....\"
\"What kind of person is not interested in those things?\"

\"Jeremy Corbyn?\"
 
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 07:22:30 -0500, Paul, another mentally deficient,
troll-feeding, senile asshole, blathered:


The shape of the edge of the device,
hints that it is not a disc capacitor.

The presentation of his posts, as well as his entire posting history, hints
that he is a fucking stupid troll and attention whore, troll-feeding senile
asshole!
 

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