Rebuild a laptop battery pack

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • In this episode I show how to rebuild a Lithium battery pack for a laptop.
    Visit me on Facebook
    / the8bitguy

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @FennecTECH
    @FennecTECH Před 8 lety +1950

    "ultrafire" probally not the best brand name for lithium batteries"

    • @consolehacker54
      @consolehacker54 Před 8 lety +66

      A year or so ago when e-cigs first became incredibly popular I repaired them for people a lot, and most of them use an 18650 battery or two. The Ultrafire ones are complete trash, and that specific brand is known to actually vent/explode a lot in ecig/vape setups because of the insane current draw

    • @chrispychreme02
      @chrispychreme02 Před 7 lety +48

      Fennec Fox So that's what the Note 7 used XD

    • @ryuranzou
      @ryuranzou Před 7 lety +10

      This made me look at what model my e-cig battery was and it uses that same model. Didn't realize that laptop batteries could use the same model. That's neat.

    • @robitaill3
      @robitaill3 Před 7 lety +15

      neither is Samsung. take their Note 7 for example

    • @evknucklehead
      @evknucklehead Před 7 lety +12

      The Note 7 didn't use this particular model of cell, as it would be nowhere near small enough to fit in their phone. As for who made the batteries used in the Note 7, I don't know, but could possibly find out with a bit of research.

  • @Sefilenginar
    @Sefilenginar Před 6 lety +39

    One tip: Adhesive copper tape does wonders - adheres very well and you don't need to heat up any part of the cell, and they are very thin meaning they're good for confined spaces (like these laptop batteries) where soldering adds unwanted thickness. Less messy too, and no need for extra wires or anything. I used them for two separate batteries that I refurbished a while back and they work seamlessly.

    • @Kit-lb6tr
      @Kit-lb6tr Před rokem +3

      I'm going to try this for testing purposes. Sounds like a good idea for non permanent projects too.

    • @cheezyfriez12
      @cheezyfriez12 Před rokem +2

      @@Kit-lb6tr I'm assuming the adhesive side is non conductive right?

    • @sanibelt
      @sanibelt Před rokem +2

      @@cheezyfriez12 Depends what kind you get, some are conductive on both sides some aren't.

    • @ikhsanmaulana8660
      @ikhsanmaulana8660 Před rokem +2

      Nice idea but i found it in wrong time, arghhh

    • @UnulOarecare
      @UnulOarecare Před 11 měsíci

      Adhesive copper tape...hmmm...interesting...I'm curious where I can find that in Brasov, Romania - will try online as well but thank you for this useful tip - trying to repair a laptop battery from 2012 for an Asus x54c
      Romanian - romana: banda de cupru autoadeziva...hmmm...interesant...sunt curios unde pot găsi așa ceva în Brașov, Romania - voi căuta și online dar mulțumesc pt această sugestie folositoare - incerc sa repar o baterie de la un Asus x54c

  • @IIGrayfoxII
    @IIGrayfoxII Před 8 lety +369

    I got 4 of those 6,000 mAh of those ultra fire batteries for an LED torch
    The capacities were tested with a Foxnovo F4-S
    136mAh
    272mAh
    409mAh
    351mAh

    • @IIGrayfoxII
      @IIGrayfoxII Před 8 lety +19

      +JuriePie I knew they would be shit, but hey they cost $5 for the 4, they run the LED torch for 10 min at full brightness before the torch starts to dim which is not a bad thing as the torch gets very hot

    • @kleavenae
      @kleavenae Před 8 lety +5

      +IIGrayfoxII I have one 6,000 Ultrafire that has 286mAh actual capacity, too.

    • @AlAminIsmailDaily
      @AlAminIsmailDaily Před 8 lety +25

      +IIGrayfoxII
      wow.. just wow..
      1/5 of advertised capacity

    • @IIGrayfoxII
      @IIGrayfoxII Před 8 lety +19

      +Ismail Mohd Yusof
      you cant even get 18650s in 4000mAh let alone 6,000mAh.
      I checked on ebay, they are now claiming 9000mAh

    • @leocurious9919
      @leocurious9919 Před 8 lety +17

      +Ismail Mohd Yusof 300mAh * 5 = 1500mAh. Not 6000mAh. 300 obviosuly is 1/20 of 6000

  • @brandonlehman7440
    @brandonlehman7440 Před rokem +9

    The old intro is quite nostalgic, can't believe the growth this channel has had!

  • @JakeJoris
    @JakeJoris Před 5 lety +108

    "ultrafire" batteries have capacity from 50mah to 400mah.

  • @Broadcast1Channel
    @Broadcast1Channel Před 9 lety +86

    When getting lithium cells make sure to get the tagged ones if you are going to be soldering them. Applying a soldering iron directly to the cell is very bad as too much heat is transferred in to the cell which can damage the cell or even trigger a thermal runaway. Permanent connections made directly to the cells should only be done with a tag / impulse welder to minimise heating to the cell.

    • @zen4realfightman426
      @zen4realfightman426 Před 3 lety +2

      Well he like a lot of us probably doesn't have a place to use a tag for impulse welder and does not own one

    • @garyhanson655
      @garyhanson655 Před 3 lety +17

      @@zen4realfightman426 if you don't have the correct tools to do the job safely or properly than maybe you shouldn't be doing it.

    • @zen4realfightman426
      @zen4realfightman426 Před 3 lety +7

      @@garyhanson655 well not in this specific scenario but sometimes you have no choice but to do the job with incorrect tools but desperate times call for desperate measures

    • @KrotowX
      @KrotowX Před 3 lety +1

      Nowadays DIY people can buy very compact and affordable handheld spot welding kits and metal strips for 18650 cell terminal welding. Check Banggood and Aliexpress for portable spot welders. Requirement for room venting during use is still in effect.

    • @shawnerz98
      @shawnerz98 Před 3 lety +10

      @@garyhanson655 I've done 2 laptops (12 cells + other connections) with a soldering iron set to about 700 degrees. No issues. Scuffed up the tips of the batteries and used flux to minimize contact time and heating. You work with what you got to get the job done. Not buying a tack welder such a small, temporary job.

  • @10100rsn
    @10100rsn Před 9 lety +67

    Great tutorial. I've done this a lot with older laptops and it works great, but there are a few things to watch out for.
    1) Don't buy cheap batteries from eBay. Buy them NEW from a reputable source.
    2) Buy the batteries *with the tabs*. YES! You can buy them brand new with the tabs welded on them. If you try to solder to these batteries directly like that you can damage them and even cause them to catch fire or explode. In properly made 18650 batteries, that top button tab that you soldered to is not actually connected directly into the battery. It would be connected through a PTC+CID device (which sometimes is that top tab) that can fail at high temperatures or over-volt/over-current conditions. So soldering directly to it can actually kill the battery or even destroy the protection device making the battery very dangerous.
    3) This simple method will not work with most newer laptop batteries. Most newer laptop batteries require you to reset or reprogram the charge controller. Some even lock you out once you remove the old batteries and so you need to replace _and then_ reprogram the charge controller chip to make it work properly. So if you're really determined it can be done, but you can save yourself the time and money and just get a new one...

    • @supernova6486
      @supernova6486 Před 7 lety +7

      Save yourself the time and money and just get a new one... Not if they don't make them anymore as is the case with my Gateway/Acer MD-7818U. You could say why not just get a new notebook well the answer is that I have upgraded the notebook and still use it because it still runs windows XP and windows 7 X64 in dual boot. I will not touch windows 10 because of the system bricking forced updates and will not use windows 8 or 8.1 because of the metro theme or rather those blasted live tiles that look like a child's toy and or no desktop.

  • @Yeen125
    @Yeen125 Před 9 lety +570

    To be fair, my only and major concern about buying cheap batteries from China is that they may explode after a certain period of time.

    • @TheDragonballboy
      @TheDragonballboy Před 9 lety +30

      Like those old dell laptops

    • @The8BitGuy
      @The8BitGuy  Před 9 lety +163

      ***** Admittedly, I had that concern myself. I guess I'll let you know if they explode.

    • @Wiejeben
      @Wiejeben Před 9 lety +2

      The iBookGuy +Gage M. You will probably notice a burning smell before they do. But don't take my word for it :D

    • @sausagedog52
      @sausagedog52 Před 9 lety +9

      ***** theyre actually fairly safe, just terrible quality

    • @MikeyLovejoy
      @MikeyLovejoy Před 9 lety +1

      The iBookGuy get it on video lol man i wish u were still selling ibook g4

  • @codebeat4192
    @codebeat4192 Před 5 lety +48

    Notice (and warning): This will only work for dumb/dolt battery packs (for example the battery pack of the IBM 2141). If there is a circuit board included inside the battery package, for example to charge the batteries balanced and/or a chip (IC) to report the health of the battery, a 'smart' battery (not only just a simple current protection IC), this might not work and could be dangerous.
    The problem is the health data stored/recorded inside the IC. It is not calibrated like you noticed, well, it actually is, however with old batteries in mind. Some IC's use also a charge counter to determine the health status (lifetime) of the whole battery, after X charges it needs to be replaced and/or it will use a modified charge/operating scheme. This is for safety but also to sell new batteries.
    If you replace the batteries with new ones, the IC 'thinks' these batteries are still the old ones and charges the new batteries like the old ones (for example at higher current). Result: The batteries will last a little longer however not as long as should (like you noticed - no evidence the batteries are of bad quality) and the batteries could be damaged earlier, can get very hot, start to leak or even explode. You are warned, do not underestimate batteries of this type or caliber.
    You can only do this when you can reset the chip (must support an extended battery protocol) however only a few support this. In this example it is Apple, I am sure that is not possible. Don't waste your time and money to such revive projects, it won't last very long and could be (very) dangerous. Also solder the joints is a pretty bad practice but that's another story.
    No blame at all, hopes it helps by experience, by being informative to avoid unnecessary dangerous situations to other people.

    • @dieselgeezer18
      @dieselgeezer18 Před 5 lety +5

      oof

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred Před 5 lety +1

      probably he doesn't care about getting full time from the batteries, he just wants some backup power for when he needs to change room or when there's a power outtage so the thing just doesn't shutdown immediately (causing harm to the hard disk for example) What I really wanna know is why my Samsung phone's batteries were working fine one day lasting for 2 hours charge and then suddenly one day it would not last over 10 minutes without being connected to the charger, that was annoying.

    • @j.lietka9406
      @j.lietka9406 Před 4 lety +3

      so if you determine that 1, 2, or more, 18650s are bad, the best practice when rebuilding the pack, is to have the same brand & capacity cells to replace them? thanks & great response
      have you made a mini tac/spot welder to tac on the nickel strips to the terminals? thank you

    • @j.lietka9406
      @j.lietka9406 Před 4 lety +2

      code beat hmmm thought i just posted a reply here. so the best way, and safest! to replace bad cells is to use matching brand & capacity? and properly tac the nickel strip to the terminals. is there a way to reset the battery pack monitor PCB? thank you for the great info

    • @so_many_women_so_little_ti2833
      @so_many_women_so_little_ti2833 Před 4 lety

      Thanks I appreciated. I sent same question to him before I sent you (I saw your comment after I sent him) I have no knowledge and I took my battery to special technician (I don't know if he's good or no). I have few questions:
      1- How about if I change all 6 cells one time just to make sure I have all cells are new?
      2- What is the different between cells color (Green, Blue, Orange,....)?
      3- If no Difference, my laptop is Acer Aspire 2920z, battery color is green, can I change them with example blue, Purple,.... cells?
      4- If I change all 6 cells, do I need to make like recognize/setting between the new cells and the circuit? (I hope I made it clear. I don't know how to explain it).
      or 5- Should I just forget it no need to change the cells? Advise me please.

  • @THEtechknight
    @THEtechknight Před 8 lety +78

    You actually got really lucky that it took off and worked. I have seen more often than not, the controller's EEPROM needs to be re-virginized and have all the "battery dead" flags reset. Dell batteries are notorious for that, same with IBM.

    • @THEtechknight
      @THEtechknight Před 8 lety +10

      ***** There are actually software packages that will do that, you do need a programming adapter though, once you remove the eeprom. Some batteries have a backdoor where you can use the existing SMbus. Some dont.

    • @pyroslavx7922
      @pyroslavx7922 Před 6 lety +15

      You do it like disarming an IED bomb ;-)
      Connect aligator clips (if you feel brave today ;-) or solder temporarily some random old li-ion cells to all contacts, no cell connection to protection board should ever get disconnected. If it does, protection circuit of some batteries, (but not all), will raise a tampering/catastrophic failure flag in its MCU software, and will appear dead.
      Then you remove old cells and solder on/install new cells, then you disconnect temporary connected cells. (voltage difference between new and old cells does not really matter, as long as they are somewhere between fully charged - 4.2v and fully discharged - 2.5V, there will be no damage connecting the two together in parallel temporarily, current between them will be few amps for some seconds and slowly taper off, this is still within specs)
      This is considered a "safety feature" (i guess coz it protects laptop company from money loss from lower replacement battery sales).

    • @tyronenelson9124
      @tyronenelson9124 Před 6 lety +9

      Pyroslav x your right the eeprom within the battery pack records charge miss balancing between the cells then sometimes it can suddenly permanently disable the whole battery back even when you replace the cells, so you end up purchasing a new one from the manufacturers, i think its abit of an intentional money scam

    • @ChintanMeena
      @ChintanMeena Před 6 lety +6

      The connection of 2 batteries are in parallel and then they are made into series (3x) , there is no way for controller in this particular circuit to know which cell died (in parallel connection) it can only detect potential difference across *parallel unit as a whole* if it marked those set as bad cell then current will fail to flow from those cell and the potential drop of 11.1 is really hard to maintain if this happens basically it means whole system is dead ... and probably the controller will flag whole system as dead
      Pardon my ignorance but i don't see any reason "software controlling flow of current" just by flagging cells as good or bad .. as you can't really deactivate single unit connected in parallel connection
      (for a unit that is connected in parallel in order to deactivate would need to be short circuited (risky))
      or
      it need to be physically removed from circuit that is open circuited)
      can you point out how exactly controller deactivate (that is, put batteries in open circuit ) I'm asking this out of interest ...

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před 5 lety +4

      Packard Bell battery packs tend to completely shut down (and never recharge again) when the voltage gets below a certain level on even a single cell. That's how my BP-8050 battery packs have failed.

  • @wonton8983
    @wonton8983 Před 2 lety +1

    To get an old laptop working that needed a bios update, which requires at least a 20% battery charge as well as mains supply. With the laptop battery removed, I connected my old 9v battery drill battery directly onto the laptops battery pins for the +- -, did the bios update, which fixed the battery charging problem and as a bonus it fixed the RAM issue that had more than 1/2 the RAM reserved. Job done.

  • @paijoaoxxi1873
    @paijoaoxxi1873 Před 9 lety +8

    I love your videos! They're always so creative and different from other Tech channels out there. I don't see them making iMac G3 Cathouses or replacing Laptop Battery Packs. Even older videos from 2012-2014 are still relevant and cool. Good Job! (I do like other Tech channels. I just enjoy your creativity!)

  • @robertnoble3733
    @robertnoble3733 Před 9 lety +224

    Soldering directly to the cells is NOT a good idea. To be safe, you should buy cells that have solder tabs welded to each end. Then make solder connections near the end of the tabs away from the cell.

    • @stuvs830
      @stuvs830 Před 9 lety +6

      I did blanch at seeing that. But my Macbook battery suddenly bulged one day so I'm apprehensive. They weren't yet engineered to quit accepting a charge when plugged in.

    • @OpenGL4ever
      @OpenGL4ever Před 9 lety +26

      +Robert Noble Exactly. What he does in this video is wrong and a high safety risk.
      Especially when using Lithium battieres. It's okay to solder NiMH batteries, it will of course harm them, but NiMH batteries won't explode when soldered. Lithium batteries will explode and that is the danger in doing this. That's why manufacturers only weld them together.

    • @asusphoebus2114
      @asusphoebus2114 Před 9 lety +27

      +OpenGL4ever
      In case of explosion he would get few millions of youtube views in 2 days :-)

    • @thysonsacclaim
      @thysonsacclaim Před 7 lety +9

      Do they actually "explode"? I've only ever seen them get hot and start to take off thermally and start a fire. Didn't know they could explode.
      But then again, a battery is basically a controlled bomb. The more energy you pack into one, the closer you are to having an explosive device.

    • @OpenGL4ever
      @OpenGL4ever Před 7 lety +14

      Adam Lawson
      Well it's a question of how you define explode.
      For example, It the seal is broken, lithium will react with the humidity in the air, this will cause a fast chemical reaction heating and building up hydrogen gas and this gas is not only expanding but if it gets mixed with the air and catches fire it will also explode.
      If this happens within the enclosure of the battery, pressure increases to until the enclosure rips suddenly apart then followed by the ignition of the hydrogen with air and eh voila you have some sort of explosion.
      But of course, it is not a reaction like TNT.

  • @taikomotionanimations1089

    DID HE JUST SAID HIS FIRST BAD WORD ON HIS VIDEO?!

  • @skat3stepvirgo
    @skat3stepvirgo Před 4 lety +3

    One thing I have found is a lot of the batteries in those packs are still good so you may want to test them to see if you get better results because they run independently. In the packs that have bad batteries they're usually all bad but most of the packs still have good cells.

  • @Kotesu
    @Kotesu Před 9 lety +4

    There might be a secondary issue with the short run time of your batteries: internal resistance and brownout. As your computer pulls current from a battery, the chemical reaction that occurs can - if they're old or poorly constructed - not be able to react fast enough to push more electrons through. This manifests as a dip in voltage until the action that's pulling extra current ends. The problem is that most battery monitors use voltage to determine the state of the charge, so your laptop suddenly freaks out and thinks the battery is dead.
    Putting cells in parallel does two things: 1) they offer greater capacity, but equally as important 2) increases the maximum current output of the pack. Given the cheap Chinese cells, the electrolyte inside might be contaminated or more likely that the electrodes have less surface and reactive area.

  • @no-damn-alias
    @no-damn-alias Před 2 lety +13

    Would've been interesting to see the internal resistance of the old cells and what their capacity still is

  • @s0nnyburnett
    @s0nnyburnett Před 8 lety +209

    Spray can extinguisher. For a lithium fire.
    I wouldn't even feel safe with a real ABC extinguisher.

    • @Dan-TechAndMusic
      @Dan-TechAndMusic Před 8 lety +53

      +simhopp Nah, all you need is a metal bin and a pot of sand, and something you can use to shove the battery with into the bin in case it bursts. Then you just fill the bin with sand. That'll kill the lithium fire quite effectively.

    • @AmyraCarter
      @AmyraCarter Před 6 lety +7

      Either that, or a very cold environment, especially if the change is sudden and sharp. The fire will flare up but quickly lose its' fuel.
      Tossing a lithium fire into a wet snowbank? Yeah, it'll work. It'll also melt a good portion of the snow in the process.

    • @eduardoavila646
      @eduardoavila646 Před 6 lety +3

      So you're not felling safe with your iphone/ipad/android/windowsphone/laptop device?

    • @VerstehenSieMathis
      @VerstehenSieMathis Před 6 lety +5

      Those batteries contain lithium compounds instead of the bare lithium metal, so it's not thaaat bad... the extinguisher might be able to prevent the other stuff on the table from catching fire :)

    • @eduardoavila646
      @eduardoavila646 Před 6 lety +3

      Mathis Bü If it doesnt contain water or dont make water condensate in there its ok. Lithium really doesnt like to be punchtured or being in direct contact with water, causing some flames.
      But it isnt as dangerous as its fumes.

  • @AlanNg1202
    @AlanNg1202 Před 6 lety

    Straight to the point addressing the pros and cons of these El Cheapo batteries.

  • @Landrew0
    @Landrew0 Před 8 lety +170

    "You get what you pay for."
    Nope, not always. Ask those guys in the white vans who are selling audio cables for $500 apiece.

    • @user-tt6ct4ii8t
      @user-tt6ct4ii8t Před 7 lety +12

      I got a laptop for 550 dollars.... It broke just when the warrenty was out.... Never buy HP....

    • @jacobbutler7942
      @jacobbutler7942 Před 5 lety +5

      @@user-tt6ct4ii8t they all do that. Especially because Norton Security

    • @PunakiviAddikti
      @PunakiviAddikti Před 5 lety +1

      @@user-tt6ct4ii8t Did it break or did it just get so slow it was unusable? You can repair the OS with a new copy of Windows 10, available for free.

    • @user-tt6ct4ii8t
      @user-tt6ct4ii8t Před 5 lety +2

      @@PunakiviAddikti No the whole display is broken.

    • @mwbgaming28
      @mwbgaming28 Před 5 lety +7

      @@PunakiviAddikti why would anyone use that cancer?
      windows 7 is far better (and before you mention security, just use a good antivirus program dumbass)

  • @DoctorBlankenstein
    @DoctorBlankenstein Před 7 lety +4

    TIP: Rough up the ends of the batteries with a file or sandpaper before tinning them with solder. The solder will stick a lot easier, and better.

  • @Raprada
    @Raprada Před 9 lety +77

    You need to upload more often, I really like your videos!

    • @OpenGL4ever
      @OpenGL4ever Před 9 lety +4

      +Riswan Ahmad P This video is a high safety risk. You mustn't solder Lithium batteries, they will explode. Only welding is okay.

    • @BenTheTechGuy
      @BenTheTechGuy Před 9 lety +1

      +Riswan Ahmad P same here bro

    • @bairfamilyfarm1336
      @bairfamilyfarm1336 Před 9 lety +1

      +OpenGL4ever So... I put myself at risk of death or serious injury at least 4 times already?

    • @SofiaFox
      @SofiaFox Před 6 lety +1

      +OpenGl4ever Then why didn't it explode in this video and the one of the four time +zappy bear did?

    • @kentuckywildcatgobigblue7190
      @kentuckywildcatgobigblue7190 Před 6 lety +2

      Most likely has a life and a family outside of CZcams.

  • @xaer0knight
    @xaer0knight Před 5 lety +2

    instead of applying so much heat to be battery to get the solder to adhere, just file the terminals down to make a rough service, clean terminals with rubbing alcohol, apply some flux, then solder. A rougher surface can help solder stick.

  • @linksmith1057
    @linksmith1057 Před 5 lety +2

    Sorry David, utmost respect for you, but soldering to a lithium ion battery is the tantamount to setting up a time bomb. When these batteries build up pressure, there is a vent on the top under the positive terminal. This valve is actuated by a spring with very specific tempering. Heating up the battery to solder on it ruins the tempering of this spring. If the battery has a "non-passive failure" (in other words, starts venting flame), the damaged spring may not relieve pressure, so instead of a small jet of fire, you could have an explosion. It's like using a recalled airbag. It won't hurt you until you are in a car accident, but when you are in a car accident, it could be a lot worse as a result of this. Just buy a third party replacement battery.

  • @Valveman11
    @Valveman11 Před 6 lety +5

    Thanks for the video!
    I have a Toshiba T1100 Plus that was given to me. Of course, the old NiCad battery pack was dead. I went to a battery store and obtained some new cells, rated at 5000mah instead of the original 4000mah. All I can say is that the run time is incredible! I used that laptop as my school laptop in college, and I used it all the time. I would get about 10 hours of run time on it, and only had to recharge it once a week.
    Keep in mind that I was using this computer at school just a few years ago, not back in the 90's or something. It turned out to be the most reliable computer I have ever owned. I got a lot of looks with that old dinosaur :)

  • @medmusic7977
    @medmusic7977 Před 4 lety +10

    You forgot to tell that the batteries should be at the same voltage before getting assembled! It is important, if they’re not at the same voltage that what can happen.
    1. Extremely heat and no charging .
    2. Very slow charging .
    3. No charging at all.
    They all should be at 3.7 Volt at least and you discharge them after assembly not charge them at first.

    • @sdfxcvblank5756
      @sdfxcvblank5756 Před 4 lety +2

      and whats a good way to discharge it fully?

    • @medmusic7977
      @medmusic7977 Před 4 lety +2

      sdfxcv blank use a 18650 power bank case theres plenty on ebay or aliexpress just type “Power bank case” and then use something on the usb port of the case

  • @iammeena6945
    @iammeena6945 Před 7 lety +7

    If anyone wants to follow instructions like shown in this video always make sure You Don't Solder The Two Vent Holes Closed (Positive End Of Each Battery) Because If You Do, Your Batteries Will Explode. Vent Holes Are There For A Reason!!

    • @scorpionbradford
      @scorpionbradford Před 5 lety

      Vent holes ? Please give me more details on this. He nvr mentioned any caution about this !

    • @HungPham-ki9wu
      @HungPham-ki9wu Před 2 lety

      what you mean those vent holes are even connected together (parrallel circuit)

  • @skorpius752
    @skorpius752 Před 4 lety +3

    Just what I needed. I am getting ready to refurb my Sony Vaio E series laptop and it is impossible to buy a decent battery pack these days. I have a couple of battery packs for it, which will be nice for portability. Well, insofar as you can be portable with an 8lb monster.

  • @FurEngel
    @FurEngel Před 7 lety +6

    Pro tip: make sure to apply a drop of liquid flux to the battery terminals before applying solder. Also, solder paste may work better than solder wire.

  • @filds1
    @filds1 Před 5 lety +3

    Im pretty sure you need to test all the batteries and see the voltage. And then pair the batteries with closest voltage possible to get the best result

  • @Fendibson
    @Fendibson Před 3 lety +2

    You got some balls doing an experiment like this.

  • @pyroslavx7922
    @pyroslavx7922 Před 6 lety +2

    Rather keep clay bucket/pot (as it's non conducting and heat resistant) and bags of fine sand you can throw over flaming battery, as it won't mess up electronics as water/foam extinguisher does... and those dust extinguishers make way more mess than a small fire, and li-ions keep re-igniting after you extinguish them. I tried it ;-)

  • @superluig164
    @superluig164 Před 8 lety +9

    My ASUS ROG gaming laptop only goes for about an hour 30 on a charge, and this laptop was only released LAST YEAR. Trust me, you can live with that on an only iBook.

    • @consolehacker54
      @consolehacker54 Před 8 lety +20

      An old iBook doesn't exactly match the power of your Asus though, if you could connect the Asus battery to the iBook it would probably run for a week lol

    • @josemuygay8851
      @josemuygay8851 Před 7 lety +2

      +Jason Grimm bruh not really, that shitty ibook uses 8 battery cells, back then processors were a lot more inefficient

  • @abbas1967
    @abbas1967 Před 4 lety +5

    Thanks for the video , i have a question: they told me if you want to change the battery you must not remove the old one before you connect the new one to the electronic circuit because it will lose their memory and it will not work at all even if the new battery is good !
    Is that true ? Is it a successful process to change the the battery ? Can i remove the old one without losing the memory of the circuit ?

  • @dhdhlee9449
    @dhdhlee9449 Před 6 lety +1

    You really should try to spot weld the batteries. I never thought it be a good idea to buy a battery spot welder separately. So I just modified my good old trusted Telwin modular 20 TI sheet metal spot welder. Worked like a charm for all the battery taps.

  • @whitenorthstar
    @whitenorthstar Před 8 lety +4

    Flux the battery terminals first as it makes soldering the wires on that bit easier, You can also reuse 18650 batterys from old battery packs as long as they look and test ok,

    • @marcusdudley7235
      @marcusdudley7235 Před 8 lety +1

      +john porter Fine grit sandpaper, then flux, then solder.

    • @whitenorthstar
      @whitenorthstar Před 8 lety

      Marc Dudlee the fine grit sandpaper goes without saying Marc...but in a lota cases the flux is enough to remove the oxide coating on the metal as thats whats its job is to do...remove the oxide coating,

  • @fabts4
    @fabts4 Před 8 lety +27

    Soldering onto Li-ion cells, I wouldn't do it.
    You can have an online shop weld the nickel plates for you.

  • @JesuszillaS
    @JesuszillaS Před 7 lety +3

    Also I'd recommend Mouser or DigiKey over eBay for parts.

  • @jaymoreno8469
    @jaymoreno8469 Před 9 lety +2

    Your love for technology really shows! Great channel, and video. I hope you keep producing quality content.

  • @wateringcan2
    @wateringcan2 Před 4 měsíci

    For anyone reading this, you need a class D fire extinguisher in order to stop a lipo fire. Regular ABC extinguishers won't work, and they can actually spread the fire. I couldn't find the extinguisher in the video online anymore, but I found similar ones from the same manufacturer, and I am nearly certain they wouldn't be effective against a lipo fire.
    Sorry for being critical, especially on such an old video, but I had to mention it since it's a matter of fire safety.

  • @friedrichsinofzik5969
    @friedrichsinofzik5969 Před 8 lety +13

    itś not so easy. Most of battery packs have an internal controller that you need to access by manual to change some parameters when you exchange the batteries. Like maximum charge, reset the charge count and minimum and maximal voltage charges.

    • @BavarianM
      @BavarianM Před 3 lety

      More modern ones have that problem

  • @betariffs
    @betariffs Před 7 lety +5

    1:43 The closest we ever got to him swearing.

    • @josetorrealba1887
      @josetorrealba1887 Před 4 lety

      hey ,if anyone else needs to find out about restoring a battery try Jadonite Renovate Battery Buddy (do a google search ) ? Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my buddy got amazing results with it.

  • @jedblow
    @jedblow Před 2 lety

    I did not have any extra room to use wire. I took a tin can and cut the lid into strips. I used a butane soldering iron and flux. I placed a lot of heat on the batteries. I purchased high quality Sony batteries 9 dollars each. It was still difficult to fit into the pack by just a few mils. I took a Dremel tool to further grind down the solder joints. I got it all in and used rtv to reseal the case in case I ever need to reopen it. And it works great. It was a Sony Viao laptop from the year 2000. I installed Windows xp on it to run old games and other software.

  • @gasoares85
    @gasoares85 Před 9 lety

    Really good video. I've never imagined how a laptop battery looks like inside.

  • @eduardoavila646
    @eduardoavila646 Před 5 lety +4

    And a warning so people dont waste time and money:
    -Not all lithium batteries can be fixed like that, some have a cycle count in the micro controller, wich prevents the battery from working again after its supposed lifetime has been achieved. A good example is a dell inspiron 1545 laptop wich can't have just the cells replaced, the battery still reports to the bios "battery life bad" and and laptop wont charge nor use their stored energy.

    • @WildMidE
      @WildMidE Před 4 lety

      Exactly its happened to me after replacemet the cells, my laptop inspiron 3421, so how I can fix this problem please tell me if you know,
      Thanks

    • @flameshana9
      @flameshana9 Před 4 lety

      Why not just reset the controller?

    • @WildMidE
      @WildMidE Před 4 lety

      @@flameshana9 some battries controler cannot reset

    • @flameshana9
      @flameshana9 Před 4 lety +1

      @@WildMidE That sounds like a purposeful limitation. Like how cell phone batteries are hard to replace nowadays.

  • @nickguy6820
    @nickguy6820 Před 8 lety +37

    This is really not a good idea, for several reasons:
    1) Soldering Lithium batteries is a catastrophe waiting to happen. Most of the chemistries used in 18650 cells release oxygen when they hit thermal runaway. That means, if something catches fire, they provide their own fuel. An extinguisher will be next to useless. Thermal runaway might occur somewhere north of 150C, but... what's the temp on your iron again?
    2) You don't know anything about the charge controller. Does it assume the cells are pre-balanced? If so, top or bottom balanced? Or does it actively balance them? If it balances, then your first few charges might just take a long time to get from 90-100%. If it doesn't, then it's up to you to balance them appropriately, otherwise you end up with a "fuel gauge" that is way off. (Speaking of which, is that fuel gauge self-calibrating, or hard-coded?)
    3) What was the chemistry of the original cells? The new ones? What is the recommended charge current? What is the low-voltage cutoff, and at what load? What voltage should you charge to? Most common chemistries don't differ by much, but some can be charged to 4.2V while others will get very cranky above 3.6. Chances are you'll be close. However, things get really ugly when you're not. (Keep it off your lap for a while.)
    4) As others have mentioned, some charge controllers have cell state memory. This isn't as much dangerous as a waste of time and money, as it would just mean it won't work.
    I'm all for DIY, but Lithium Ion cells are temperamental and the risks should not be taken lightly. If you don't know what you're doing, this is a job best suited for a battery specialist. Or just pony up for a genuine replacement pack. Cheaper than new nads.

    • @yourick1953
      @yourick1953 Před 8 lety +13

      You just spend 1 hour on writing that

    • @nickguy6820
      @nickguy6820 Před 8 lety +20

      Nah, I type fast. Absolutely no more than 55 minutes. 57, tops.

    • @williamd7161
      @williamd7161 Před 6 lety +5

      Nick Guy. Looks like you know well about batteries? Why don't you make your own video on why not to rebuild your loptop battery!

    • @davideil.
      @davideil. Před 6 lety +1

      Nick Guy here to second what William d said. You should make a video. More knowledge in the world is only better. You might even save someone a hospital visit.

  • @craigbuzan
    @craigbuzan Před 8 lety +1

    Fantastic video. I've always been just one step shy of doing this (worried about soldering LiON batteries). This gives me all I need to get it done now!

  • @supercrazymario404
    @supercrazymario404 Před 4 lety

    I’m going to rebuild a PowerBook G4 Titanium battery with 8 genuine 3500mah 18650 cells from Panasonic and this video sure helped me!

  • @mrlithium69
    @mrlithium69 Před 8 lety +4

    Reminds me of what Austin Evans dad would seem like

  • @TechWalker
    @TechWalker Před 9 lety +6

    You should have a list of things you need before starting a tutorial.

  • @eduardoavila646
    @eduardoavila646 Před 5 lety +2

    3:24 It's way better to buy a super capacitor and use it as a safe pinpoint welder and weld thin steel plates into the batteries (like the originals) than soldering it. Also way easier.
    A supercapacitor with 500f capacity at 2.7v is totally safe (as 2.7v is a low voltage and wouldn't be able to electrocute anyone) and its also cheap. It doesnt heat up badly the battery, as a soldering iron, so it doesnt have the risk of loosing maximum capacity because of heat damage, nor it has risks of overheating and shorting out.

  • @alexandrecouture2462
    @alexandrecouture2462 Před 4 lety

    Great video! I am currently rebuilding a battery pack for my little Mitsubishi Amity CN laptop-netbook from 1996. I use a lithium battery pack from ikea, made for their bluetooth speakers.

  • @ihaveriffs8261
    @ihaveriffs8261 Před 9 lety +8

    So is this project economical if you buy better and more expensive batteries? Or am I better off just buying a new battery pack? I've looked them up before and it's only like $20 for the one I need.

    • @The8BitGuy
      @The8BitGuy  Před 9 lety +16

      Ihaveriffs - In the case of the computer I did this for, the OEM battery packs are no longer available and the few aftermarket batteries that are still being sold are old-stock so they probably don't have much life left in them either. If it is a newer computer, you are probably better off buying an OEM battery.

    • @tokeeptrackofrandomsubs5899
      @tokeeptrackofrandomsubs5899 Před 8 lety +6

      +Ihaveriffs The way I look at it when buying 18650 batteries to replace the one inside the pack there are two possible solutions:
      1. Buy new batteries from a name brand through a proper source.
      2. Buy a few extra of the cheap ones or maybe scavenge some from other sources.
      With method 1 the trouble is finding a reliable source that is somewhat affordable, for my purchases usually to power either a project or a torch I generally use a webshop named NKON (based in the Netherlands and this gives me convenient 1 day shipping, outside Europe it's probably better to use another source). Haven't had a bad battery from them yet but I'm sure there are many other good places, in addition to the warning that was in the video also be aware that there's a lot of battery rewrapping going on.. if it seems too cheap to be true it probably is. Panasonic high capacity batteries go up to 3400 mAh (perhaps a bit higher now? it's been a few years since I investigated stuff) but it'll be in that order of magnitude. High drain batteries typically go up to 2900 mAh and not much higher, but I found that Panasonic NCR18650B 3400 mAh batteries will hold up pretty well up to 5A discharge currents.
      Now when you opt for method 2 and buy cheap batteries I suggested to get a few extra because you'll have to charge and test the batteries and balance the whole pack somewhat and perhaps dump one or two of the really bad ones. The bottleneck for this design is when one of the pairs that is chained up in series gets drained, then the microchip will notice that the voltage over those cells drops too low and shut down. So in order to avoid this you should first upon arrival check if the batteries have a sane voltage (if they are below the recommended voltage charge them with caution or not at all). Then once they get to a full state of charge using a proper CC/CV charging system run a discharge test on them, it can be whatever really constant resistance with a power resistor, running a light that'll do okay in the 2.90V-4.20V range or if you have it a fancy electronic load that can be set to constant current, constant power, constant reistance etc. Then discharge them with that method of choice and take note of how long each takes to drain to your cutoff voltage (don't discharge them too deep or they might be damaged by it!), match the pairs up well enough so that two cells combined are roughly similar for all 4 pairs in series. This should give you the best result while sourcing cheap batteries.
      If you don't have a lot of fancy electronics tools the most economical way is probably to find a lightbulb that runs well on the voltage range or power resistor and while its discharging it monitor the voltage over the battery with a multimeter, doesn't have to be expensive. To charge the batteries you could use a charger designed for 18650 batteries or a lab powersupply that you can set to both a constant current and constant voltage limit. Set the charging limit to something sane (don't go above 1C, aka filling up the "rated capacity" in one hour) and set the max voltage on 4.20V. While they are charging in the constant current stage I'd recommend to keep an eye on the temperature of the cells too, if they get a lot hotter than normal good cells its a sign those have high internal resistance and probably shouldn't be included in the pack.

    • @power-max
      @power-max Před 8 lety +7

      +The 8-Bit Guy Those cheap batteries tend to be all over the place, i have had some that worked pretty well (for a short time), and others which did not hold any charge. They definitely would not stay well balanced in series like that. I have heard that they actually are often recycled batteries, ones that are name brand but have been pulled out of (you guessed it) things like old laptop batteries!!!

    • @fkujakedmyname
      @fkujakedmyname Před 8 lety

      +Ihaveriffs that has the cheapos in it so yes

    • @roborovsky6950
      @roborovsky6950 Před 8 lety +1

      +Ihaveriffs No , it's not better to buy some shit oem battery pack. You can invest a little more and get panasonic 3600mah cells , wich will in most cases almost double the run time , since most laptops got 2000-2400 mah cells in the factory battery. Those panasonic cells really hold 3600 mah's though.

  • @MrCoffeeman58
    @MrCoffeeman58 Před 9 lety +6

    wow, the first time david "swore" in a video, that was funny as hell though! 1:40
    Btw: Do you think you could do a iBook G4 battery rebuild?

  • @quaditz
    @quaditz Před 9 lety +1

    I exactly did this like 2 years ago for an Acer notebook and then it did not recognize the battery anymore (altough I soldered everything perfectly, all voltage levels where correct). The reason was, that the controller was "resetted" when I desoldered the old ones. So if you want to be sure, first apply a power supply (with the right voltage) in parallel to the battery pack (and apply all voltages to the 3 or 4 voltage levels). Then desolder the old ones and solder in the new ones, then you can disconnect the power supply.

  • @Nubyrc
    @Nubyrc Před 7 lety

    buy lipos for RC aircraft and cars, they even have the wires out for charge cycle testing. You can get a lot MAH for a small package.

  • @Chevroldsmobuiac
    @Chevroldsmobuiac Před 9 lety +7

    Is there any concern about damaging the cells with the heat from the soldering iron?

    • @OpenGL4ever
      @OpenGL4ever Před 9 lety +1

      +W Sears The instructions in this video are wrong. It is very dangerous to solder lithium batteries, they can explode by doing so. Lithium batteries must be only spot welded with the right welding tool, but never soldered.

  • @stonent
    @stonent Před 8 lety +79

    The correct term is toilet-seat ibook.

  • @ParadoxdesignsOrg
    @ParadoxdesignsOrg Před 9 lety +2

    I've been wanting to try this as I fix laptops all the time. Great tips!

  • @dash8brj
    @dash8brj Před rokem

    I have a battery spot welder - I know this video is a bit old but do not encourage people to solder to lithium ion cells. It only take one to have the soldering iron on the cell for just a bit too long and they can go nuclear. spot welders are great, fairly inexpensive and make the connection in a split second, not heating the battery anywhere near as much as soldering. I repack laptops with Panasonic 18650's which usually end up running longer than the original battery.

  • @oo0speed0oo
    @oo0speed0oo Před 8 lety +6

    Your the man bro. Great job. keep up the great work.

  • @BavarianM
    @BavarianM Před 5 lety +5

    Most laptop batteries stop working if you remove the cells

    • @JakeJoris
      @JakeJoris Před 5 lety

      nope they don't.

    • @BavarianM
      @BavarianM Před 3 lety

      @@JakeJoris they do
      Unkes it's an old laptop
      Inna try doing this on my 98 compaq armada

    • @JakeJoris
      @JakeJoris Před 3 lety +1

      @@BavarianM I've replaced cells in at least 10 laptop batteries, they all continued to work, except the t60 one.

    • @BavarianM
      @BavarianM Před rokem

      @@JakeJoris I’ve never been lucky with it
      Have you tried on a Compaq Armada 1750?

  • @jhonwask
    @jhonwask Před 6 lety

    MY HP notebook battery finally failed the other day. Thanks for the information, as I will attempt to repair the battery pack. Love your channel.

  • @jasonvoorhees3282
    @jasonvoorhees3282 Před 2 lety

    Don’t get excited, the reason why it lasted for about 1 hour and 40 minutes is because the device was idle (it was only on the desktop screen without loads).
    I think if you use it (watching a movie for instance), it wouldn’t last as long. I estimate it may last 45 minutes which is still acceptable in my opinion.

  • @mattypants
    @mattypants Před 8 lety +3

    As someone who's worked in this industry for years and has hundreds of hours of training both in classroom and hands on with engineers, this is incredibly dangerous and irresponsible. There is no guarantee the protection circuitry is still functional or functioning properly and no guarantee soldiering the battery won't rupture the pressure seal. Rechargeable packs of any chemistry should always be spot welded to avoid damage. Take a look at the Hoverboard meltdown videos if you want to see what an inappropriately constructed lithium battery will do. I would strongly recommend spending some time looking at videos and reading literature on what happens when lithium batteries go critical before you do this. In any case, a regular fire extinguisher wouldn't work to put the cell out once it ignites, you would need a dry powder extinguisher specifically designed for metal fires.

  • @RetroMMA
    @RetroMMA Před 9 lety +4

    ",8" would result in "PRESS PLAY ON TAPE", no?

    • @The8BitGuy
      @The8BitGuy  Před 9 lety +14

      RetroMMA no. Device 8 is usually your first disk drive. If I left off the 8, it would ask me to PRESS PLAY ON TAPE.

  • @alexwest1977
    @alexwest1977 Před 9 lety

    those efest batteries if they are genuine are pretty decent batteries for the price. the ones I have are pretty close to the stated mAh rating. The IMR type are also pretty safe and durable too.

  • @Xantioss
    @Xantioss Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks for this ! :-) I was a bit affraid of blowing myself up or building a firehazzard but this looks good enough for me to yank out some old crap to get up and running again !

  • @XTHHedgehog
    @XTHHedgehog Před 7 lety +10

    First and last time I've seen a swear word on one of his videos

    • @thohangst
      @thohangst Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, I'm kinda in to content that is safe for the whole family. I'm glad to hear this was a one-off.

    • @aidancommenting
      @aidancommenting Před 4 lety

      Timestamp?
      Edit: never mind

    • @ChaseMC215
      @ChaseMC215 Před 4 lety

      @@aidancommenting
      Where was it?

    • @aidancommenting
      @aidancommenting Před 4 lety

      1:40

  • @calolbest4202
    @calolbest4202 Před 5 lety +2

    1:44 the 8 bit Guy only curse word

  • @SenileOtaku
    @SenileOtaku Před 2 lety +1

    As an alternative to soldering to the batteries themselves, how about making something like the battery holders you would find in your typical portable tape or MP3 player? Spring-metal tabs that you simply snap the rechargeable batteries into, and you simply wire the contacts up in the appropriate configuration. That way you're not risking fire/explosion from soldering to the batteries, and you can change the individual batteries out.
    The other thought is, if you have a machine you want to be functional without needing to look original; get some of those rechargeable USB power packs and make up an external pack. You wouldn't be able to charge the packs with the computer, and it would depend on the original battery pack having a power output readily divided into 5v increments though.

    • @djmips
      @djmips Před rokem +2

      Interesting idea but there is generally not much room in the battery packs to allow for battery holders so it would be a bit tricky - might require 3D printing a whole different case.

  • @repairitdontreplaceit
    @repairitdontreplaceit Před 6 lety

    most modern battery packs that use lithium cells have complex electronics to monitor the cells , just replacing the cells will not reset the firmware in the charging electronics so the battery will not charge

  • @mikkkeh
    @mikkkeh Před 5 lety +8

    OMG! A curse word on this channel,I thought he never said any!

    • @IMDYT420
      @IMDYT420 Před 4 lety +1

      Vadim Gaming he didn’t say it he put a image in so technically he did say it

  • @RynardMooreVstar1
    @RynardMooreVstar1 Před 9 lety +49

    Folks, please do not attempt to rebuild a laptop battery as suggested in this vid. The method of connecting the cells using solder is wrong and highly dangerous. The cells need to be tack welded together. Tack welding batteries of any type requires a spot welder and knowledge of how to use said equipment. Additionally, lithium ion battery fires are very hard to put out once they get going. You are better off letting a professional battery rebuilder handle the task or just buying a replacement battery pack from a reputable seller -- if you don't know what you are doing. In any case, again, don't follow the instructions in this vid because they are completely wrong.

    • @SoundToxin
      @SoundToxin Před 9 lety +6

      Rynard Moore Can you give us a source on this information?

    • @RynardMooreVstar1
      @RynardMooreVstar1 Před 9 lety +12

      SoundToxin​ I did battery rebuilding for years but if you don't believe me look up someone who does this as a trade -- they will tell you the same thing.

  • @saudlodhi
    @saudlodhi Před 8 lety

    Tip.. instead of scratching the plastic cover. .. put few drop of gas (petrol) between the cover joints. repeat this for few times. the glue in between will loose its stickness then the cover cab be removed by just tapping the battery pack with ...like screw driver handle

  • @Slot1Gamer
    @Slot1Gamer Před 9 lety +2

    Some laptop batteries have built in battery management, if it goes dead flat it will disable it's self, so even if you replaced the cells it won't charge

    • @BavarianM
      @BavarianM Před 5 lety +2

      Most*

    • @WildMidE
      @WildMidE Před 4 lety +1

      Exactly happened to me after cells replacement, my laptop is inspiron 3421, so how i can fix this problem? Please tell me if you know.
      Thanks

    • @brucewrigleysgumchewz4667
      @brucewrigleysgumchewz4667 Před 3 lety

      Sounds like something Apple would do. 💩

  • @polixstar8249
    @polixstar8249 Před 9 lety +36

    i though this was a kipkay vid

  • @brentblackwolf6325
    @brentblackwolf6325 Před 8 lety +7

    It doedn't look like a good idea to heat up litium batteries

    • @brentblackwolf6325
      @brentblackwolf6325 Před 8 lety +14

      So a misclick on the keyboard means that i don't know english? By the way, i'm italian, that's not even my mother tongue, or maybe you are convinced that only english speakers are allowed on youtube?

    • @brentblackwolf6325
      @brentblackwolf6325 Před 8 lety +3

      What?

    • @brentblackwolf6325
      @brentblackwolf6325 Před 8 lety +1

      Whatever

    • @kosztaz87
      @kosztaz87 Před 7 lety +1

      Yeah was thinking about the same thing. I guess if you are really quick it's ok. But I know most guys (supposed experts on stackexchange and such) don't recommend it. Still, I think I will try my luck sometime.

    • @umageddon
      @umageddon Před 7 lety +2

      how do you suppose the batteries were soldered in the first place? With ice?

  • @Thomas5937
    @Thomas5937 Před 4 lety +1

    Your solder and wire method of connecting the batteries may also have introduced more resistance than the original welded clips that were used, which could also contribute to the battery life being shorter than expected

    • @djmips
      @djmips Před rokem

      Since copper is way more conductive than nickel, I'm pretty sure it won't add appreciable resistance as the gauge he used is a decent size and the solder joints are not going to add appreciable resistance unless they were done extremely poorly.

  • @IoRobot_98
    @IoRobot_98 Před 9 lety +7

    your channel speaks almost exclusively of apple products, why you not tell us what you think about the apple today, with all the defects that have HUGE ... I'm a fan of the apple, but today makes unacceptable things like staingate, problems with the assistance, the way it behaves with the employees, the poor quality of the products ... i'm curious to hear another opinion.

    • @IoRobot_98
      @IoRobot_98 Před 9 lety

      him expresses his opinion on Apple...
      did you read the comments?

    • @IoRobot_98
      @IoRobot_98 Před 9 lety

      ***** XDDDDD np :)

    • @chrisshaw1294
      @chrisshaw1294 Před 8 lety +1

      +Lorenzo Balivo Apple doesnt make the screens, there suppliers do. staingate is not a reflection on apple, they didnt make the screen. they stepped up and will replace any bad screen for free immediately.

    • @IoRobot_98
      @IoRobot_98 Před 8 lety

      +Chris Shaw but they didn't want repair it...

    • @jameskatt1
      @jameskatt1 Před 8 lety +1

      +Lorenzo Balivo No one would want to repair it. But Apple is. So there.

  • @OpenGL4ever
    @OpenGL4ever Před 9 lety +64

    NEVER EVER solder wires on Lithium batteries! Soldering on lithium batteries is a high safety risk, only welding with the appropriate welder equipment is okay, because this works a lot faster than soldering, minimizing the risk of exploding Lithium batteries to a minimum.
    In short words: "Don't solder, weld them!"
    I really hope no one follows your false teaching video.
    If your batteries are NiMH batteries, only then it is okay to solder, but with Lithium batteries, never solder them!

    • @DFX2KX
      @DFX2KX Před 9 lety +3

      +OpenGL4ever You mean like a spot welder? Yeah, that's the safest route.
      However, if your soldering iron can melt the solder fast enough, your risk of thermal failure's pretty low. I've seen people do soldering jobs on the cells in 3,300 mAh R/C Lipo packs without problem (I wouldn't do it, mostly because I wouldn't want to be cutting that pack open myself). You do have to be aware of the dangers if that battery gets heated too much.
      That being said, you can find many a cell with a terminal already welded on, which is the route I will go with when I go and replace the cells in my Fujitsu's batteries (How I'll get the CD-slot battery open, though, is a mystery)

    • @griml0gic420
      @griml0gic420 Před 8 lety +1

      +OpenGL4ever Its not really an issue. If you are quick as stated by DFX2KX it wont thermally fail. What I have heard most is that it damages the batteries capacity. So if you were to not solder that is why.

    • @technologyproductions-ye3px
      @technologyproductions-ye3px Před 8 lety +1

      what happens to the battery

    • @griml0gic420
      @griml0gic420 Před 8 lety +3

      ***** I do it all the time. I just don't hold it to prolonged heat. Prolonged heat for a coin cell, however, is much less time than a much larger 18650 cell. "It explodes, sending burning shrapnel all over, including your eyes..." That is also why you wear proper PPE

    • @OpenGL4ever
      @OpenGL4ever Před 8 lety +4

      *****
      I do always wear eye protection when soldering or welding. I do highly recommend that.

  • @VSigma725
    @VSigma725 Před 7 lety

    I've heard old NiCad batteries can actually be restored to part of their original capacity with something called a bench power supply. You run 30V through each cell for just a second, do that 10 times, and you get a battery that works at something like 80% of what the battery originally did. Sounds dangerous, but exciting!

  • @pythonprofreak7522
    @pythonprofreak7522 Před 4 lety +1

    I having problem with that metal clip too and there is no way to solder it. Another way to get around with it is to use conductive tape and solder on the top of it. You could also use liquid tape.

    • @pythonprofreak7522
      @pythonprofreak7522 Před 4 lety +1

      The metal could be one of those property magnesium, chromium and titanium I think.

  • @gonigeena
    @gonigeena Před 8 lety +29

    don't buy chinese batteries! they will set alight

    • @Kippykip
      @Kippykip Před 8 lety

      Don't the Chinese ones use some kind of liquid? I might be wrong

    • @domnulvlad4471
      @domnulvlad4471 Před 7 lety +6

      ᴵ ᵈᶦᵈ ᵃ ᶫᶦᵗᵗᶫᵉ ᵐᶦˢᵗᵃᵏᵉ ᵇʸ ᵇᵘʸᶦᶰᵍ ᵃ ᶜʰᵉᵃᵖ ² ᵈᵒᶫᶫᵃʳ
      ᵏᵉʸᵇᵒᵃʳᵈ ᶠʳᵒᵐ ᵃ ᶜʰᶦᶰᵉˢᵉ ˢᵗᵒʳᵉ⋅ ᴺᵉᵛᵉʳ ᵈᵒ ᵗʰᵃᵗ ᵐᶦˢᵗᵃᵏᵉ

    • @technologyproductions-ye3px
      @technologyproductions-ye3px Před 7 lety +5

      Src Dgyg theres nothing wrong ekth a chinise keyboard and mouse

    • @cynic5581
      @cynic5581 Před 7 lety +3

      Its a shame China gets such a bad rep for their knock offs. Just FYI some of the best 18650 batteries from Samsung, Sony etc are also manufactured in China. They are indistinguishable from their Korean manufactured counterpart in quality, reliability, durability, etc....
      Peoples persistence for being cheap is why this stuff exist. If we all stopped buying 1 dollar 18650's (because they suck and that would make sense right?) then they would stop manufacturing such cheap batteries. But instead lets buy them then pretend to be surprised they suck and complain about the country that manufactured them ignoring the reality of the problem....

    • @kayak347
      @kayak347 Před 5 lety +2

      All batterys are Chinese lol

  • @twitch54304
    @twitch54304 Před 3 lety

    Most battery casings are ultrasonically welded. It's harder to get apart than if it were glued.

    • @brucewrigleysgumchewz4667
      @brucewrigleysgumchewz4667 Před 3 lety

      If you mean the entire laptop battery casing, yeah. I bought one of those extended battery packs for an HP laptop. The battery was like it had a bun in the oven.... it had 6 extra cells in it and stuck out the bottom. When the laptop croaked because of a toasted motherboard, I decided I wanted to salvage the 18650's in the pack. The damn thing could NOT be opened without destroying the battery housing. You could pry in a couple spots but most of it would not separate. I had to dremel that thing open. And then even after I cut it open, the cells were all glued both to each other and to the housing plastic. They REALLY did not want this to be salvageable. More like they want them tossed in the trash.

  • @MrWhitetrashbob
    @MrWhitetrashbob Před 7 lety +1

    That is a very well produced video...thank you!

  • @johnbillings5260
    @johnbillings5260 Před 6 lety

    Scuff the batteries on each end with a file or sandpaper and flux them for an easy, good job.

  • @skyem5250
    @skyem5250 Před 5 lety

    I have several things to say.
    First, DiodeGoneWild tested many of those fake cells, and many of them were around 500mAh.
    Second, a lot of people are saying that you should spot weld the batteries instead of soldering them. I agree that spot welding is better than soldering, but soldering is still fine as long as you're careful not to heat the battery too long. Fire is highly unlikely. The worst thing that would realistically happen is that the battery loses some capacity.

  • @louisereid6477
    @louisereid6477 Před 9 lety +1

    Very cool vid but can you make a vid of your office museum and house tour?

  • @MarionetteKazuko
    @MarionetteKazuko Před 7 lety

    A bit off topic, but I use 18650s for my vape mod and there's quite a few shops that actually carry ultrafire batteries still. One shop, the owner was clearly aware of how crap they are and kept them in an "unofficially" (hand written) labeled case "Ultrafire 18650 3000mah". From my understanding, some of those cheap brands also misrepresent the amps for them as well, although I can't say for certain if that's true. Point being is if someone wants to do a project like this, I'd recommend going for good batteries (sony, samsung, etc) and not take a risk with rip offs.
    That aside, this was a good video. Something to keep in mind since I have some extra batteries, although no laptop to test this with haha.

  • @Explore531
    @Explore531 Před 7 lety

    I love the beginning of your video because of Defender sound effect

  • @henryjiang3389
    @henryjiang3389 Před 4 lety

    Here is something you guys might not know about ultrafine. This brand does not particularly owned by a company. Basically, any factory can manufacture a 18650 and have these brands on it.

  • @TipsterLIVE
    @TipsterLIVE Před 9 lety

    I dig the new intro!

  • @DobleWhiteAndStabley
    @DobleWhiteAndStabley Před 6 lety

    Oh sweet! I have some spare cells after building my powerwall. Now i can rebuild a pack instead of just buying a new one which would cost me upwards of 30 bucks. This is awesome. Now that i think about it this option was so obvious but only now do i understand that this can be done.

  • @CharlieQ7400
    @CharlieQ7400 Před 5 lety

    The IbookGuy? this is the first time I know that, this video was surprisely
    recommended.

    • @luclu7_
      @luclu7_ Před 5 lety +1

      It was his old channel name

  • @zedalert
    @zedalert Před 3 lety

    Just did it today, soldering acid did it's job - I have had soldered wire to the battery within 1 second with standard 25W soldering iron.

  • @Dr.Leszek
    @Dr.Leszek Před 6 lety +1

    My way to solder 18650 cells is:
    - First of grind a little bit the soldering points on cells with Dremel or a knife ( beacuse of the nickel layer on it )
    - Then apply a little bit of flux or soldering paste
    - After that use big and flat soldering tip for soldering
    In that way the soldering is way easier and you can use much more lower temperatures of your iron
    The solder will do the same as nickel for not making cells corrode .
    BTW I Love your channel and seeing those kind of Old School electronics, i'm huge fan of that ;)

  • @TheViewer01
    @TheViewer01 Před 6 lety

    Hope this helps someone. I was trying to rebuild an old Alienware battery that is not available for purchase anymore. I bought 2 used battery units. I found out that they are designed to fall apart if you try to open it up by prying it open. You need to find a very sharp blade like a box cutter and cut perfectly around the stickered warning label and thin plastic. You have to be very careful and do it perfectly. Cut a perfect square around the sticker with the plastic still attached to it. It takes 12 1860 batteries. They are lined up by six on left side and six on right side. The ends of the battery are covered with plastic and sticky thin paper, so they won't make contact with other batteries while being crammed in the plastic casing. You don't have to mess with any other electrical wiring, just snip the spot welded metal off from the top and one wire from the bottom. They have 2 pieces. One on left and one on right. The battery model is W83066L, the computer it goes on is Alienware Area 51 9750. This project kicked my ass until I figured it all out LOL.

  • @azedfvc
    @azedfvc Před 8 lety

    Only works with old laptop battery. Now they have some component inside to prevent you to restart it if you change the li-cell. And it's way harder to reset !

  • @nayeemakhtar1
    @nayeemakhtar1 Před 8 lety

    thanks... background electric wire (on wall ) management is awesome