APN 124 - 17/22: Proposed All Party Group on Ethnic ... - 124 17
The power transistors (two of them) are IRF1404s - automotive rated power transistors with a 40V max voltage (totally fine) and a 4mΩ resistance when on.
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Oh, and I was able to read the IC label on this board - itâs a SII S8254A package. Â Which, confusingly, is a 3S or 4S battery protection IC. Â For a 5S pack. Â Theyâve got other ICs for 5S packs, but this is clearly labeled as the 8254A. Â I donât know if they had spare packages, if theyâre ignoring one of the cells, or whatâs going on - and I really, really donât feel like buzzing out the board to work out the details. Â The no-connect pins donât seem to connect to anything, but if you want to trace this board out and let me know, Iâll happily ship it to you. Â Itâd be a great reverse engineering project for a college student!
The whole pack pulls off with the top, leaving the bottom shell exposed. Â Thereâs nothing particularly interesting here - just the springs for the release tabs and a pair of vents on either end. Â No fancy walls for heatsinks, and none of that foam or padding stuff that the early lithium packs have.
So, using Ohmâs Law, with two transistors, at 15A (7.5A per transistor), each package is dumping a furious 0.2W into the heatsink, and at the peak current of 30A (15A per transistor), 0.9W per transistor. Â I guess it needs some sort of heatsink, but this seems to fall into the âseriously over-designedâ category, to me. Â Much like most early lithium packs! Â I love these things - it seems like nobody knew what to expect, so they just went bonkers.
The underside of the pack indicates that this is a P103 lithium ion battery, designed for use with the P113 charger. Â Itâs an 18V pack, rated at 24Wh - or 1.33Ah, using the normal conventions.
The bottom contains the information on the battery - P100, 18V. Â No capacity listed. Â And, you shouldnât short the terminals or throw it in a fire. Â I donât know why the older batteries donât list capacities - if anyone knows, Iâd love to find out!
Iâm sure the operatorâs manual says not to do what Iâm doing, but, hey. Â I wasnât provided one. Â And I donât intend to burn this pack up.
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The datasheet for the cells indicates that theyâre good for 15A sustained, 30A burst (for 1s).  These are definitely power cells, and theyâre pretty old.  Thereâs no date code on them, but the datasheet is from 2007, so this is certainly an older pack.  With only one set in series, this is a 15A pack that can burst a bit higher if needed to get a drill started (or when itâs stuck, which is probably bad for all parts involved).
Look at those vent holes on the right!  Same as the Rigid pack!  And the same blue foam.  And the same sort of molded rubber battery holder on the bottom.  Hmâ¦
The underside of the board clearly shows that massive diode, a thermal sensor, and the two power transistors screwed to the heatsink.
Ryobi has really changed it up with the screws holding the packs together.  Normally, I grumble about the Torx T-10 security screws - but not for this pack!  This pack is held together withâ¦
This pack is somewhat heavier, at 850g (1lb 14oz). Â Iâm sure the capacity is lower as well, but since these donât come with capacity ratings, Iâm left wondering. Â Or testing. Â But, this week, just wondering.
A bit of prying on the terminals removes the terminals and cell from the stalk (this is why the stalk is shaped as it is - thereâs a cell up in there), and the wiring is pretty clear.
That âsomethingâ is a JRMB45 - which, with a bit of searching, is a Battery Thermal Protector!  This opens at 45C, give or take, and blocks charging.  As I understand it, the battery is drained through the always-connected +/- terminals, and is charged using the center (thermally protected) terminal to avoid charging when too hot.
The cells remain attached to the BMS on top. Â On the left, thereâs a pair of power switching transistors attached to a chunky pot metal heatsink. Â In the center, thereâs a set of 5 Samsung cells in series. Â The 13Q designation, for Samsung cells, means 1300mah.
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The old NiCd batteries charge from the top three connections (and I think this one can as well), but thereâs also a pair of charge terminals along the main pack (just below the One+ label here). Â A quick survey of Ryobi batteries and chargers indicates clearly that âItâs Complicated.â Â Since I donât have any of these tools, Iâll let you work through the details of what batteries charge with what chargers and work in what tools.
On the top: Ryobi.  On the bottom: Rigid.  Look at the similarities between the BMS boards!  Theyâre not identical, but theyâre close. The same company is obviously involved (and even without the Wan Nien label, Iâd have concluded the same thing).  Same goofy hole for the diode.  Same thermal sensor on the back.  Same two remote transistors for power.  Same layout of the parts!  Why, Iâd almost say Wan Nien just designed and sold both packs!
To remove the BMS and cells from the top of the pack, a non-security Torx T10 screw (yay!) in the top of the stem comes out, and then one pries the stem down with a plastic tool (or a metal screwdriver, if your idea of a good time is dead shorts across a battery pack terminals, or you believe theyâre so dead as to not spot weld the screwdriver in place).
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This week, I have a pair of Ryobi One+ batteries - one lithium, one NiCd. Â This represents the âold generationâ and ânew generationâ of a generation of batteries - they both run in the 18V tools, but one is the old style NiCd, and one is a new style lithium (though, as youâll see, early lithium).
The exposed interconnect is the fuse - throw enough current through this, and it will pop.  I donât actually know what the fuse current is, and I donât have equipment suited to testing it, though this does seem to be an excuse to buy a 100A+ lab power supplyâ¦
Unlike the previous pack, there are no secondary charging connections on this pack - just the basic three connections at the top. Â Why three? Â Youâll see!
Next week, Iâll wrap up my current wave of tool pack teardowns with a bunch of NiCd packs, then go onto something a bit different!
The back of the pack suggests removing the battery from the tool when changing bits out, which Iâm sure is observed almost never. Â Itâs certainly a good idea, but as Mike Rowe points out, âSafety Third.â Â You decide what matters to you on this front.
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You can see the soldered connections for the balancing leading from the nickel interconnects to the board. Â The circle cut in the negative terminal strip in the lower right is presumably some sort of fuse - if something goes terribly wrong, those thin bits of nickel will melt. Â And, like the other tool packs Iâve pulled apart, this feels like 0.3mm strip.
Interestingly, the per-cell voltages, from the negative terminal, are 2.35V, 27mV, 0V, 35mV, 3.62V. Â Iâm guessing the BMS draws power from the middle for something, but really, I have no idea why theyâre drained in the middle. Â In any case, four of five cells are scrap (I wonât touch anything below 2.5V), and Iâm not terribly interested in the one that might be OK.
I found 5.80V across the + and - terminals, which is quite low.  I donât know yet if thatâs a signaling voltage or the full pack voltage, but itâs definitely not enough to power an 18V tool at the moment.  Given how the 18V tools work, Iâm guessing just a low pack voltage.
There are no stupid security Torx screws on this pack! Â Instead, there are some deeply recessed Phillips head screws - much easier to deal with, assuming you have a skinny enough screwdriver (I do).
The early lithium packs are absurdly complicated. Â They all have full battery management systems in place, and this keeps the pack in good shape - at least until the BMS drains the pack when it sits for a long time.
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Torx T-15 security screws! Â Same stupid post in the center. Â Fortunately, Torx security drivers are easy to find (a pack of 100 assorted security bits is less than $12 on eBay), so theyâre no problem for me. Â With the four screws out, the top and bottom pull apart. Â For this pack, the batteries stay with the top of the pack - thereâs a BMS board in there and the terminals are held in with another screw.
The positive terminal (bottom terminal here) is hooked directly to the positive terminal of the stalk cell with a bit of spot welding. Â The negative terminal (top terminal) has a wire running down to the negative pack connection point. Â And, the left terminal (âbottomâ terminal in normal orientation) has a wire heading down to a something taped to a cell!
This particular pack weighs in at 482g (1lb 1oz), and has the standard three conductor interface common to most of the older 18V packs (and, later, Iâll show you how these correspond to the older NiCd packs on the inside).
Iâll start with the more interesting pack of the two. Â This is a Ryobi lithium 18V battery, designed for the One+ series of tools.
What I find fascinating is that two packs, by two different companies, are almost identical on the inside - and have a custom BMS board by the same company. Â I suspect theyâre just custom designed by Wan Nien for the company. Â Anyone know details of this process?
The thermal sensor is a Uchiya UP72 - same as on the Rigid packs. Â This is a resistive motor cutoff sensor that is being used as some variety of input into the board microcontroller.
Itâs still May, and Iâm still doing tool pack teardowns to get through the seemingly endless boxes of tool batteries in my office. Â Iâm a bit fuzzy on where they all came from, though I do faintly recall picking up a box of dead ones at some point in the past.
Unlike last weekâs DeWalt 18V pack and the creative T-shaped BMS, thereâs nothing up the stem but a few wires and some terminals that all lead back to the BMS board.  And a serious sense of deja-vu about this board - Iâve seen that âbig diode through a hole in the boardâ design somewhere else, and Iâve got a pretty solid idea as to where.
If you need the cell interconnect layout for a rebuild on this style of pack, here you go! Â The cell below the stem cell is the center cell on the right.
Iâm not sure I like the thermal protection placement, though. Â The protection gizmo is sitting on the very outside of the pack, where it is only exposed to one cell, and has the case on one side to cool off against. Â The core of the pack can be very significantly hotter and this wonât trip charging off. Â I assume that this was designed into the system, but the difference in pack temperatures that will trip this between summer and winter has to be huge. Â I may see if I can detect a capacity difference between the center and outside cells if I test them (I will recharge a dead NiCd cell if it holds a charge - theyâre a lot safer to recharge from dead than lithium ion, which I wonât bother below 2.5V).
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The other pack I have this week is an older Ryobi pack - a NiCd (nickel cadmium battery, for you youngsters who donât know anything older than NiMH) pack.
Coming back around full circle, the most recent packs (like the DeWalt 20V Max 6.0Ah pack I pulled apart a few weeks ago) are back to âdumb packsâ - the interface board just connects the cells to the charger and the output terminals, and all the smarts are in the charger and tool. Â This newer method should be a good bit more reliable - and, usefully, a lot more hobbyist friendly if you want to use them for something else.
Itâs interesting watching the development and evolution of tool pack design.  The NiCd packs were dead simple - a bunch of cells in series, a basic thermal protection cutoff, and thatâs it.  However, they were designed around a particular form factor cell - the stem is specifically designed to fit one of the normal NiCd cells, and that left them unable to easily change things (creative T-shaped BMS boards or just leaving the space empty).  Thatâs a real downside of designing around a cell.  The newer packs (like the DeWalt 20V Max) can change cell form factor (as with the change from 18650s to 20700s) without having to redo the connections or waste space.  Itâs a useful evolution in pack design - DeWalt could just as easily do something with pouch cells if they felt like it in the 20V Max series.
Why is the pack stone dead? Â NiCd has a really high self discharge rate (around 10%/month), so sitting for a year will drain it completely.
Thereâs not much extra to see with the stem removed - just a region with no components, marked âOptional.â Â I have no idea what it does, really. Â Clearly nothing particularly important!
Iâve been comparing this pack to the Rigid packs all the way through for a reason - theyâre using a BMS from the same company!
The two little vents at the top here remind me of some similar vents I saw a few weeks back on the Rigid batteries.  I didnât think they were important enough to cover in that post, but the Rigid packs have a suspiciously similar vent pattern.