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Charging Dual Cells without using stock charging terminals?
Posted: Thu Aug 26, 2004 3:28 pm
by midget_man1387
Hey guys, newbie question here... I'd like to stretch a bit chassis and I was wondering how you guys charge when you dont use the normal charging terminals? they are so much more of a pain, and I thinnk it's be easier to just hook a couple wires up the batts and charge them that way... a good example of my question is CD's pro-stocker. He obviously had no charging terminals... I juss wanna kno how to charge without them!
thanks and sorry for sounding newbie-ish lol
Posted: Thu Aug 26, 2004 3:39 pm
by hue35
I've stretched a bunch and they all use the normal terminals.
I just make the cut right behind the little side nub grabby deals,
so it still fits on the stock charger. Here's how I've done it...
This chassis is a Thunder Charger chassis
stretched to fit a ZZ body...

Posted: Thu Aug 26, 2004 4:53 pm
by Son_Gokou
That's a pretty sick car you got there hue...does that stretch plate acting like a rear suspension (similar to the Mini-Z's)?
Posted: Thu Aug 26, 2004 5:21 pm
by hogjowlz
be creative dude. the whirly doo stunt cars have neat plugs for charging. ive borrowed that for one car. usually when i chop a chassis i try to keep the terminals in tact but you could do a lot of different things. be creative. radioshack sells tons of connecters/plugs blah blah or just run wires an inch or two that can be retracted into the chassis somehow or something.
Posted: Thu Aug 26, 2004 7:05 pm
by midget_man1387
hue35 wrote:I've stretched a bunch and they all use the normal terminals.
I just make the cut right behind the little side nub grabby deals,
so it still fits on the stock charger. Here's how I've done it...
This chassis is a Thunder Charger chassis
stretched to fit a ZZ body...

I've looked at that car a buncha' times and never realized how you did that... nice work...
but I was wrong with my explanation. I was thinking more along the lines of a pan chassis with duals and stuff...
this was how I was thinkin of wiring it.
so if I were to just put a few wires from a wall charger, where would I put each? (+) and (-)
hope you understand my stupidity
Posted: Fri Aug 27, 2004 1:27 am
by betty.k
i personally wouldn't be charging my bits directly from a plug pack, the current (ma) is just too high. you'll need to have a bigarse resistor on the v+ wire if you wanna use one. i'd say a 5w one and between 1 - 10 ohm.
once you've done that to charge you would connect the v+ from the charger to the same place as the v+ to pcb. and the v- from the charger goes to the same place as the ground to pcb.
basically connect + to + and - to - when charging.
Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2004 2:41 pm
by HACHI-RYOKU
Something like this would be helpful. I'm currently trying to score some. I would like to find the smallest ones I can get. I'm about tired of those recharging pads. The recharging base always breaks eventually and the contacts can have problems too.
http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bin/c ... type=store
I'm not sure how big this one is, so I can't really recomend ordering it, although this could point you in a direction. They may have some of these things at the local hobby store. They use them in small scale r/c planes. That's where I'm gonna check next.
Posted: Mon Oct 04, 2004 4:12 am
by Matic
betty.k wrote:i personally wouldn't be charging my bits directly from a plug pack, the current (ma) is just too high.
If you want constant charge current you can use LM317 voltage regulator and one resistor. It is realy simple and cheap - see diagram
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepage ... /page7.htm