Premium Members David Shawl SOC Posted August 19, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 19, 2008 Hello all, I would like to buy some new AB batteries soon and am wondering if it's OK to mix Hytrons and Dionics on the same sled. I have a LOT of Hytron 50s and I am considering buying some Dionics. I have read that you DON'T want to mix chemistries parallel (which I'm not sure if I can even do that on my sled, not totally sure). Otherwise I would get some new Hytron 50s. I would like to be able to handle the power-hog HD cameras and high speed film cameras and from what I've read, I need either Lith-Ion and/or NiCad to do this for reasonable runtimes. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Eric Fletcher S.O.C. Posted August 20, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Hello all, I would like to buy some new AB batteries soon and am wondering if it's OK to mix Hytrons and Dionics on the same sled. I have a LOT of Hytron 50s and I am considering buying some Dionics. I have read that you DON'T want to mix chemistries parallel (which I'm not sure if I can even do that on my sled, not totally sure). Otherwise I would get some new Hytron 50s. I would like to be able to handle the power-hog HD cameras and high speed film cameras and from what I've read, I need either Lith-Ion and/or NiCad to do this for reasonable runtimes. Thanks NO You cannot mix chemistries. Well you can if you have an XCS sled, but no other sled allows you to do it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Lawrence Karman Posted August 20, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Hello all, I would like to buy some new AB batteries soon and am wondering if it's OK to mix Hytrons and Dionics on the same sled. I have a LOT of Hytron 50s and I am considering buying some Dionics. I have read that you DON'T want to mix chemistries parallel (which I'm not sure if I can even do that on my sled, not totally sure). Otherwise I would get some new Hytron 50s. I would like to be able to handle the power-hog HD cameras and high speed film cameras and from what I've read, I need either Lith-Ion and/or NiCad to do this for reasonable runtimes. Thanks NO You cannot mix chemistries. Well you can if you have an XCS sled, but no other sled allows you to do it I just ran a Sony 900 off one Dionic and one Proformer in parallel for much of the day with no problems. Why can't you mix, Eric? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Eric Fletcher S.O.C. Posted August 20, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Hello all, I would like to buy some new AB batteries soon and am wondering if it's OK to mix Hytrons and Dionics on the same sled. I have a LOT of Hytron 50s and I am considering buying some Dionics. I have read that you DON'T want to mix chemistries parallel (which I'm not sure if I can even do that on my sled, not totally sure). Otherwise I would get some new Hytron 50s. I would like to be able to handle the power-hog HD cameras and high speed film cameras and from what I've read, I need either Lith-Ion and/or NiCad to do this for reasonable runtimes. Thanks NO You cannot mix chemistries. Well you can if you have an XCS sled, but no other sled allows you to do it I just ran a Sony 900 off one Dionic and one Proformer in parallel for much of the day with no problems. Why can't you mix, Eric? Okay let me rephrase that, you can't mix chemistries if you want the batteries to live. Due to the chemistries and internal construction each type has a very different discharge curve and internal resistance. and when you run different chems you will heat the battery with the higher resistance and heat is what kills the cells. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Alec Jarnagin SOC Posted August 20, 2008 Moderators Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 "Due to the chemistries and internal construction each type has a very different discharge curve and internal resistance. and when you run different chems you will heat the battery with the higher resistance and heat is what kills the cells." I was under the impression this was only true if putting them in parallel (so yes, not a good idea) but it is okay when they are in series. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members JimBartell Posted August 20, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 It depends on what you mean by "mixing". 1. Paralleling batteries can be very dangerous and shorten cell lives. Unless they have exactly the same charge state the battery with the higher charge state will dump energy into the lower at a massive rate until they equalize. This high current surge can damage both batteries and shorten their lives. However, if the batteries are at the same charge state this is minimized. Paralleling batteries of different chemistries is much more problematic because the intrinsic cell voltages are different so even fully charged batteries will have different voltages and lead to problems. 2. Putting two batteries in series is perfectly fine as long as you don't overload either cell. A 2 amp load going through a battery is the same regardless of what other cells it is hooked to. As long as you keep the current within the range of the smaller cell everything should be fine. Amps are amps, baby. 3. Obviously, if you have one battery power your sled and one your camera with no power sharing the point is moot. Jim "Mixmaster" Bartell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members David Shawl SOC Posted August 20, 2008 Author Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Thank you everyone for the helpful info. How do you put batteries in parallel versus series? On my sled, two batteries are used to provide 24 volt power. Are those two batteries in parallel or a series to provide that 24 volt power? A separate third battery receptacle is used to power 12 volts accessories. Can that battery be any chemistry because it is separate from the dual-battery 24 volt power? Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members JimBartell Posted August 20, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Thank you everyone for the helpful info. How do you put batteries in parallel versus series? On my sled, two batteries are used to provide 24 volt power. Are those two batteries in parallel or a series to provide that 24 volt power? A separate third battery receptacle is used to power 12 volts accessories. Can that battery be any chemistry because it is separate from the dual-battery 24 volt power? Thanks Parallel means you connect + to + and - to - to keep the same voltage but increase run time. Series means you connect the - of one battery to the + of the other to increase the voltage, i.e. putting to 12V batteries in series to get 24V. Yes, the third battery can be any chemistry since it is not mixing with the other two. And whatever you do, NO NOT connect them perpendicularly or tangentially. Jim "Mr. Geometry" Bartell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Collier Posted August 20, 2008 Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Tangentially.....I knew I should have paid attention in geometry class. Not that I am an expert with various SC and battery combos, but I did study to be an electronic engeneer in a former life so let me post my humble idea as a question. Could you, if you had different chemistries that you needed in parrallel, place a diode on each positive terminal between the batter and the power bus? So each battery's positive would connect to a diode and the diodes would be bussed together to provide power. Theoretically it should prevent reverse current if one battery should fall below the voltage of the other, while maintaning common ground and still sharing current output between the two. Yes, no? is this the 'magic' the XCS sled has? Because a couple of high amper diodes would only run a few bucks each, and add negligable weight. and further wouldn't this be a good idea to do even if you had the same chemistry batteries if they need to parallel, since even in the same batch run no battery will ever have the same voltage curve over time as another. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Jess Haas SOC Posted August 20, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 20, 2008 Yes you can add diodes and run batteries in parallel all you want. The downside is that the diodes will lower the voltage as well as lose some power as heat both of which will decrease runtime. This may or may not be a problem for your particular needs and the degree of effect they have will be dependent on the particular diodes speced. If you manage to find some diodes with minimal voltage drop and loss let me know. ~Jess Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Eric Fletcher S.O.C. Posted August 21, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 21, 2008 is this the 'magic' the XCS sled has? Nope the XCS sled has a power supply that isolates the three batteries at the input level. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Jerry Holway Posted August 21, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 21, 2008 It depends on what you mean by "mixing". 1. Paralleling batteries can be very dangerous and shorten cell lives. Unless they have exactly the same charge state the battery with the higher charge state will dump energy into the lower at a massive rate until they equalize. This high current surge can damage both batteries and shorten their lives. However, if the batteries are at the same charge state this is minimized. Paralleling batteries of different chemistries is much more problematic because the intrinsic cell voltages are different so even fully charged batteries will have different voltages and lead to problems. Jim "Mixmaster" Bartell SOME batteries have no problem being paralleled, even if they are are not at the same voltage... as they have internal diode/reverse protection built in.... BUT, as Jim warns, MOST DO NOT, so you can have serious problems. Read everything you can about your specific batteries, plus the white papers of Anton Bauer and IDX and Sanyo and anyone else, before you commit to a custom power solution. Jerry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Iain Baird Posted August 21, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 21, 2008 I have installed a diode called a schottky power rectifier in one of my PRO power jumper boxes to allow me to parallel two batteries with out having them cross charge each other. L221.pdf Schottky power rectifier diodes work in varying degrees. This particular one is a very low loss version and larger than most diodes so doesn't get as hot as the smaller versions. It is still small enough to fit inside my PRO power jumper box. Panavision Canada is using the same Diodes to build battery belts (three 140's) for the Genesis Toaster when flying in two piece mode. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Jess Haas SOC Posted August 21, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 21, 2008 Specs look good and mouser.com has them for only $3.99 a piece. Looks like one actually contains 2 diodes so It could protect two batteries. I might have to get a few of these to play with. The only thing I haven't been able to find are the physical dimensions. Any idea what they are? ~Jess Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Iain Baird Posted August 22, 2008 Premium Members Report Share Posted August 22, 2008 Yes each one can handle two batteries. They have a common cathode for the shared output of the two sources. The diode is 16mm wide, 5mm deep and approx. 32 mm long with the pins, without the pins it's 20.5mm long IAIN Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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