442 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
442 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
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RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES AND LAPTOP COMPUTERS
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No other topic seems to inspire more opinion and comment than
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the proper care and handling of rechargeable laptop and notebook
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computer batteries. Should you slow or fast charge them? What is
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the true life of a rechargeable battery after which it must be
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disposed? Do rechargeable batteries have a "memory" effect? Can
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nickel-cadmium batteries explode when charging or discharging?
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Although this tutorial may seem technical in places, try to read
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ALL of it since battery power may be your only source of laptop
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power on many occasions.
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For many portable computers a variety of rechargeable battery
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options exist today. But frequently it comes down to the old
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standby: nickel-cadmium batteries. Ubiquitous in consumer
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electronic items such as shavers, flashlights, toothbrushes and
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radios, nickel-cadmiums or "nicads" are a reasonable balance of
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power, cost and weight and are used by many computer
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manufacturers as the portable power source of choice. Let's
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scratch the surface on the topic since there is QUITE A BIT the
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manufacturer doesn't tell you about nicads....
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Glance at the following chemical equation which is at the heart
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of the nickel-cadmium cell reaction. Don't get overly anxious
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because high school chemistry was not your favorite subject.
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We'll take things slowly....
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<-----
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Cd + 2 NiOOH + 2 KOH -----> Cd(OH) + 2NiO + 2 KOH
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2
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In this highly simplified reaction sequence, electricity is
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generated when the reaction proceeds in the direction of the
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right pointing arrow, the discharge cycle. If the reaction
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proceeds in the left direction the cell is charging.
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In simplest terms, a nicad cell (a battery is constructed of
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several cells hooked together) has a positively charged plate of
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nickelic hydroxide and a negative plate of metallic cadmium. The
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liquid between the positive and negatives plates which
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facilitates this chemical reaction is usually a dilute solution
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of potassium hydroxide - similar to lye or the Draino (tm)
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solution your pour down the sink to clean your plumbing. When
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discharging and thus producing electricity, the nickelic
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hydroxide is reduced to nickelous hydroxide as hydroxyl ions
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from the potassium hydroxide electrolyte combine with the
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cadmium metal of the negative plate of the cell to form cadmium
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hydroxide. Cadmium is oxidized when this happens and electrons
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are provided into the external circuit, such as your laptop
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computer.
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When charging, the process reverses and hydroxyl ions combine
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with the nickel which accepts electrons from the external
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charging circuit. Notice that the electrolyte, potassium
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hydroxide is unchanged with two atoms or units produced on both
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sides of the chemical equation whether charging or discharging.
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This is why you do not need to add more water to a nicad battery
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which operates as a sealed reaction container. It regenerates
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its electrolyte in both the charge and discharge cycles.
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All of this is an ideal nicad cell. The real world of computers
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and rechargeable batteries is not quite that simple. The first
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SERIOUS item to consider is that all nicad cells and batteries
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generate gas during both the charging, and to a lesser extent,
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discharging cycle.
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During recharging, oxygen gas is generated at the positive
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electrode while hydrogen gas is produced at the negative
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electrode. In other types of rechargeable cells, a standard lead
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acid car battery for example, these gasses are usually released
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into the atmosphere. The nicad cell does not have this luxury
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since it must operate cleanly and with minimum release of gasses
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or liquids. To minimize hydrogen gas release, nicad cells
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usually have an oversized negative electrode which tends to
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reabsorb hydrogen gas. In addition oxygen is recycled by
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combining with metallic cadmium to produce cadmium oxide. So
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called "fast-charging" nicad cells prevent gas buildup and
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dissipate some of the heat generated during the quick charge
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cycle by further enlarging the electrodes. Heat and gas buildup
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is thus controlled and kept to tolerable limits in quick charge
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nicads.
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The first of several lessons which can be derived from this
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technical discussion is that the buildup of hydrogen and oxygen
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gas during the charging cycle is normally dissipated unless HIGH
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recharging rates are attempted or unusually high temperatures
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are produced. If the nicad cell is charged at abnormally high
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rates the oxygen gas cannot dissipate and will EXPLOSIVELY
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rupture the cell.
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A safety system of sorts exists within the design structure of
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most nicad cells via a pressure venting system - a plastic
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diaphragm membrane at the top of the cell and small external
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hole or "exhaust vent." In theory the system safely vents excess
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pressure and then reseals. In practice the resealing is never
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complete and the cell may continue to ooze caustic electrolyte
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or worse the vent may not open soon enough and the cell may
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simply explode. The vent is really designed for SEVERE charging
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or discharging rates. In normal use it should NEVER activate; if
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it does, the battery should be discarded. In cases of massive
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overcharge or discharge the safety vent is usually too little
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too late and a dangerous battery explosion takes place anyway.
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During rapid discharge - short circuiting the nicad cell or
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battery with a piece of wire, for example - gas buildup and heat
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can be generated and a violent explosion can occur. Another
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reason why nicads can explosively burst when short circuited and
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forced to discharge quickly is that they have relatively low
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"internal resistance" which allows them to dump their electrical
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capacity quickly and with explosive force.
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Common zinc carbon batteries have a much higher internal
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resistance and when shorted may produce serious burns to your
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fingers from melting wire but usually will not explode due to
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sudden gas buildup. On the point of sudden nicad discharge by
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short circuit you might be tempted to say that it would be highly
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unlikely with a portable computer battery. Not so. Tales are
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told of laptop computer batteries which have exploded when a
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careless owner shoved several fully charged nicad batteries in a
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travel case with a set of spare keys. If the keys accidentally
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contact both the positive and negative poles of the nicad
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simultaneously, a violent explosion reaction can occur!
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Clearly nicads have some unusual features to be respected and
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understood. Be careful with charged nicads and treat them as the
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small "hand grenades" which they can become. Heat, sudden short
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circuits and high rates of charging are the problem in this
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area.
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The correct operating temperature for discharging and recharging
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nicads is from 65F to 85F, according to most manufacturers. High
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and low ranges of from +32F to 115F are possible as upper and
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lower limits if nicads MUST be used in extreme environments
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although discharge and recharge efficiency may be adversely
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affected - it may require more power to fully charge the battery,
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charge may not be held for as long on the shelf after charging
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and finally discharge may not produce a full three or four hour
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computing session at these severe temperature ranges.
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Electrically, individual nicad cells - the units which are
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hooked together to produce the final battery - have a charged
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voltage of 1.25 volts. Nominally this drops to 1.2 volts under
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actual discharge use or "load" in the electrical device.
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Individual cells are strung together in "series" with the
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positive terminal of one cell touching the negative terminal of
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the next cell in sequence to raise the voltage to that suitable
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for the electrical device. Thus two cells hooked in "series" as
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a battery produce 2 X 1.2 volts = 2.4 volts. Likewise, three
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cells connected as a battery produce 3.6 volts. By the way,
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ordinary flashlight batteries of the carbon zinc type have a
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nominal voltage of 1.5 volts compared to the 1.2 volts of the
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nicad cell.
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Nicad batteries have an unusual and highly characteristic
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discharge behavior which is best described as "a stable
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discharge plateau then sudden voltage drop." Essentially a fully
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charged nicad battery provides constant voltage and current
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until near its exhaustion at which point the voltage SUDDENLY
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DROPS and the cell is, for practical purposes, completely
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discharged.
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Compare this to standard carbon zinc and alkaline batteries
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which gradually drop in voltage and amperage through the
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discharge cycle of the battery. In use nicads tend to be stable,
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then die suddenly at the end while conventional non-rechargeable
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batteries slowly decay in voltage as their power is consumed.
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One conclusion you might draw from this is that when your
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portable computer beeps that the nicad battery voltage is
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nearing exhaustion you literally have only moments of use left!
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The good news is that nicads produce dependable power through
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their discharge cycle which is highly desirable with digital
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data and computer memory devices.
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The "memory effect" of nicads is perhaps the most discussed and
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misunderstood phenomenon associated with nicad cells and
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batteries. An undesirable and somewhat unique characteristic of
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nicad batteries that they can develop a "memory" which can
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decrease either the capacity or voltage of the battery.
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The first type of memory problem in nicads - voltage memory - is
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caused by sustained charging over many days or months. This
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memory effect can be accelerated by high ambient temperature
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extreme duration of charge and high rate of charge. In effect
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the battery is charged for such a long period of time or at such
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a high rate or high temperature that the efficiency of the
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chemical reaction is impaired and proper terminal voltage
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readings are not achieved.
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In the second, more common "memory capacity" problem, the nicad
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loses the capability to deliver its full power capacity. One
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cause of this peculiar memory problem is the FREQUENT PARTIAL
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DISCHARGE of the battery - use for perhaps 30 minutes - and then
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full recharge again. In effect the nicad battery "learns" that
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only part of its capacity is used and over several cycles of
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"partial depletion and then full recharge" that less then full
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capacity is needed. It will then be unable to deliver a full
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two or three hour standard discharge in normal use. Fortunately
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memory effects are usually temporary and can be reversed.
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The chemical basis for these two memory effects is not fully
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understood, but may have to do with obscure oxidation reactions
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which temporarily coat the internal electrodes of the battery
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with thin layers of complex non-reactive chemical compounds
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which can be removed by more fully "exercising" a nicad through a
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complete charge/discharge cycle.
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It is claimed by many manufacturers that this odd memory effect
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of nicads has been largely eliminated due to modern
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manufacturing methods. However to some degree this may in fact
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be a result of newer charging systems and the relatively
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complete discharge of nicad power by modern laptops. In effect
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the batteries are charged and discharged in a more appropriate
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manner by most laptop users so memory effects "appear" to be no
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longer a problem.
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Both memory problems - voltage memory and capacity memory - are
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usually temporary and can be corrected by discharging the
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battery to or very near its exhaustion point (optimum drawdown
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voltage is about 1.0 to .9 volts for a standard 1.2 volt nicad)
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and then recharging it to full capacity. Repeat this discharge-
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recharge cycle from 2 to five times and frequently the nicad
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will lose its memory for the "partial capacity" and again
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provide a full 3 or 4 hours of use in most laptops. Actually,
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frequent FULL discharge and recharge prolongs the life of a
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nicad. The more you use them the longer they last!
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Most folks who want to completely discharge laptop nicads simply
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leave the computer on until it runs down. A much faster method is
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to use the following batch file which continuously reads the
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directory of a disk and writes the contents to a disk file.
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The continuous disk access drains nicad power much faster. If
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you are not familiar with batch files, read the batch file
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tutorial elsewhere in this program. Here's the three line batch
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file. To stop the batch file at any time press the control and
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break keys simultaneously. When finished you may wish to erase
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both the batch file and the small file named "test" which it
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creates.
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:start
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dir>test
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goto start
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As an aside, the newer nickel-hydride batteries used in some
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laptop and notebook computers do not seem to suffer from memory
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effects. But these batteries are more expensive and not in
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common use by most laptop manufacturers.
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Nicads do eventually fail. And for various reasons. Temporary or
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partial failure due to memory effects was discussed in the
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previous paragraphs.
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Permanent failure - usually between 3 to 5 years into the life
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of a typical nicad can happen due to the growth of
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characteristic "whiskers" of conducting chemical compounds which
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effectively bridge the internal gap between the positive and
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negative electrodes inside the battery. Effectively these small
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contamination deposits gradually short circuit the battery
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internally which leads to inability to charge or discharge. Some
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clever electronic hobbyists build high current "surge" power
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supplies which can burn open these internal deposits and reopen
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the gap between positive and negative electrodes. A risky
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practice at best - given the explosive reputation of nicads - but
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"zapping" nicads in this manner has been documented as one way
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to add life to an otherwise dying battery. A risky an usually
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ill-advised attempt to salvage an otherwise dying battery.
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A different permanent failure can result from premature loss of the
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liquid electrolyte from the battery. High temperature and/or
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high charging rates are usually the cause here. Quick-charge
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batteries frequently fail due to this problem if their charging
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circuits are not properly designed. If the top edge of the cell
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which contains the fail safe pressure release valve has a
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buildup of white corrosion powder this is probably the residue
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ot the expelled electrolyte and the cell may be on its way to
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failure and should be replaced. Note that you can only see this
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corrosion buildup on the top of the SINGLE nicad cells which are
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usually encased within a surrounding plastic battery housing.
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The plastic housing may show little problem externally.
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Generally, however, the average computer user should not attempt
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to open the protective plastic case of the battery to examine
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each cell. If the manufacturer seals several individual nicad
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cells in a plastic battery container it is for GOOD reason and
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your own personal safety. As a rule quick charge nicads do not
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last as long a regular nicads due to heat build up during the
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charging cycle.
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So how long will a nicad battery last before complete failure
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occurs? Manufacturers estimate LOW figures between 500 and 1,000
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full charge and discharge cycles or about 3 to 5 five years, as
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noted above. Some nicads have been known to approach 5,000 to
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10,000 charge and discharge cycles before permanent failure.
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Excessive quick charging, heat buildup, infrequent use and lack
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of full charge all contribute to shortened nicad lifespan.
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Charging and discharging mathematics...
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Charging nicads is generally done automatically by a charging
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circuit. Two practical pieces of advice: 1) if the battery
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becomes VERY hot something could be wrong 2) if the manufacturer
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tells you that the battery will be fully charged after a certain
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length of time although it can be left charging longer you will
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probably do the nicad a favor by removing it after full charge
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is reached. Some clever nicad users simply attach an inexpensive
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electrical timer - similar to those used to turn lights on and
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off in the evening - directly to the nicad charger to prevent
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overcharging.
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Generally nicads have a proper charging rate which depends on
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each manufacturers recommendation. For standard nicads which are
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NOT quick charge types the proper slow or "trickle" charge rate
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is determined by dividing the ampere hour capacity of the
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battery by 10. For example if a nicad has a total capacity of 1
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ampere hour, dividing this by ten (1/10) produces a correct
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trickle charging rate of .1 amps or 100 milliamps. Quick-charge
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nicads can accept a charge rapidly and the suggested charging
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rate is determined by dividing the ampere hour capacity of the
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battery by 3 rather than by 10. These figures represent the
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trickle charge rate which theoretically means the nicad "could"
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be safely left charging indefinitely without harm.
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Higher efficiency chargers are designed not to simply trickle
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charge nicads but start a discharged battery at a HIGH rate of
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charge and then taper the charging current back quickly to the
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safer "trickle" charge rate once full charge is reached. Usually
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for regular nicads this "initial surge charge" can be as high as
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the ampere hour capacity divided by 3. For quick charge nicads
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this "initial surge charge" can be as high as the ampere hour
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capacity divided by 1. Obviously these are very high charge
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rates and are provided to discharged batteries and then
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quickly discontinued once full charge is approached. Clearly a
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charging circuit of this sophistication is expensive and may
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even contain its own microprocessor to sense the discharge level
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of the nicad and calculate the optimum charge rate, time and
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trickle charge transition. Since we have previously discussed
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the adverse affect of heat on nicads it is essential to note
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that NICADS SHOULD BE CHARGED IN A COOL OR ROOM TEMPERATURE
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location since they normally generate heat when charged. If you
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minimize heat buildup - especially during the charging cycle -
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you will prolong the useful life of your nicad battery.
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Discharging a nicad - especially if you are trying to remove a
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"memory" problem such as that discussed earlier does NOT mean
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discharging a cell to zero volts. Usually the correct discharge
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voltage is about 1.0 volts. This may seem odd when you consider
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that the fully charged cell has a 1.2 volt reading, but in fact
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at 1.0 volts a typical nicad cell has released about 90% to 95%
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of its energy - another eccentric, but predictable behavior of
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nicads given the rapid "voltage drop off" as they near the end
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of their three or four hour life in a laptop computer.
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Shelf life. While carbon zinc and alkaline batteries can hold
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their charge for years, nicads lose their charge relatively
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quickly. Although it varies, one quick rule of thumb is that a
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typical fully charged nicad will lose roughly 25% to 35% of full
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charge in one month. Then another 25% to 35% of THE CHARGE
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REMAINING in the next month. And so on and so on. Thus if you
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have several nicad batteries you want to charge for a trip you
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will be taking in a month, it is probably better to charge ALL
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OF THEM the final week just before the trip rather than the
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month before. For want of a better phrase, this might be called
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"shelf discharge" and is normal with all nicads and has to do
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with slight electrical leakage and chemical compound decay
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internally within a charged nicad which sits on a shelf. Cooling
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or refrigerating the nicad (but NOT freezing) will slow this
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"shelf discharge" since you are cooling and slowing the
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breakdown reaction. In fact ALL batteries will last longer when
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refrigerated until they are used. Simply store them in
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individual sealed plastic bags (to minimize moisture
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condensation) and place them in the refrigerator.
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And so we conclude with a little summary....
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1) Do exactly what the manufacturer suggests for both
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discharging and recharging a nicad.
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2) Keep temperatures - especially during charging - cool or at
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normal room temperature.
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3) Never short circuit a nicad intentionally or accidentally.
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4) Try cycling a nicad through several COMPLETE discharge and
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recharge cycles if it "appears" to be faulty an incapable of
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operating your equipment for a normal three or four hour
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operating period.
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5) Remove nicads from charging circuits or discontinue charging
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when full charge has been reached.
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6) Watch for white flaky corrosion deposits on the upper edge of
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the cell near the pressure vent this can mean impending cell
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failure and electrolyte loss.
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7) Dispose of permanently defective nicads properly - contact
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the manufacturer for instructions since cadmium is a dangerous
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toxic metal and has been banned from many dump sites. Try
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calling your local city hall and ask who can answer a question
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about cadmium metal waste disposal.
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8) When the nicad battery power begins to drop near the end of a
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discharge cycle it will drop VERY QUICKLY due to the rapid
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characteristic dropoff of nicads. Prepare for laptop shutdown
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quickly.
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9) Cycle your nicads through a FULL DEEP discharge and FULL
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COMPLETE recharge frequently - they will last LONGER before you
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must dispose of them and deliver MORE power when used.
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10) Infrequently used nicads should be charged and discharged at
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least once or twice every two or three months to prolong their
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usable lifetime before permanent failure.
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11) If your nicads are stated by the manufacturer to be quick
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charge type, you can probably prolong their life by slow or
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trickle charging them (if your charger provides that option)
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since you will minimize heat and gas buildup within the cell.
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Just because they can be quick charged does not mean they MUST
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be quick charged. Nicads last longer and deliver more power when
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not driven to extremes of temperature or overcharging.
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Tutorial finished. Be sure to order your FOUR BONUS DISKS which
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expand this software package with vital tools, updates and
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additional tutorial material for laptop users! Send $20.00 to
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Seattle Scientific Photography, Department LAP, PO Box 1506,
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Mercer Island, WA 98040. Bonus disks shipped promptly! Some
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portions of this software package use sections from the larger
|
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PC-Learn tutorial system which you will also receive with your
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order. Modifications, custom program versions, site and LAN
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licenses of this package for business or corporate use are
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possible, contact the author. This software is shareware - an
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honor system which means TRY BEFORE YOU BUY. Press escape key to
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return to menu.
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