Thank you, thank you, thank you Les!Just put a battery in and let it charge automatically. When finished try pressing any button to scroll through different parameters, a C button usually means channel (which battery) and the other will change readouts... you can't hurt anything.
To test capacity you must fully drain a battery first but if you just want the internal resistance (in milli ohms shown on the meter somewhere as mΩ) this is usually shown when charging or you can scroll to find it. A great battery will be around 50mΩ, a bad battery is anything over 300 and is usually on the way out.
I would finish charging the battery in your external charger and let the charger tell you if it is OK.Do you think it's still safe to use the battery?
Cell is 3/4 years old I believe, never got below 3.4v, never set fully charged and unusued for more than a week, never sit in high t° place like a car for long... Forgotten to say it's a Sony VTC6.How old is the cell? Was it allowed to under-discharge at some point? (i.e get below 3V or even 2.5V?) Was it left fully charged for a long time? Was it left fully charged in high temperature?
Charger said the battery was 4.14v... I suppose this is means the battery to be still good although I'll check the battery again in a few days in order to know if battery keep the level of charge or if a self-discharge happen, I put another quasi-new vtc6 in the Uwell for now.I would finish charging the battery in your external charger and let the charger tell you if it is OK.
Thank you for your answer. It looks like I will try to get LG HG2 or Sony.Being 3000mAh and high drain capable equals a shorter max performance life, the price of being safe IMO even if you are just using them in an OG Arizer Air.
I have VTC6 and LG HG2 that are both around 2600mAh after 4+ years of use....not bad for about $10ea when purchased(I think I had to get 4 at a time though).
I have heard the Molicel suffers from the same shorter top-end performance life.
The Efest 3000mAh 20a CDR are supposed to be good but is made in China so the Japanese Sony or South Korean LG HG2 is probably still one of the best options...the biggest thing is to get from a reputable seller so hopefully, you get some EU options linked here soon.
The Molicel P26A and newer P28A are the recommended brand from "Mooch" who is a well respected battery reviewer from the ecig world with an elaborate test setup. Many high power vape users swear by them, the make of TinyMight switched to them last year based on customer feedback. They are made under a license from Samsung using their technology.Thank you for your answer. It looks like I will try to get LG HG2 or Sony.
I picked up https://www.18650batterystore.com/collections/opus-charger/products/opus-btc3100-v2-2 because it had 2 smilies (lol) on some pretty famous charger guide you've likely seen floating around the internet, and because 18650 recommended it. It can discharge batteries for me, but just down to a preset level (2.8V). I'm not really planning to monkey w/ that except maybe to try refresh mode if a battery seems notably short and I think I can eke another couple of months of use out of it or something. I mostly meant are there any advantages or disadvantages to e.g. pulling a battery out of my vape at 90% and popping it onto the charger, which automagically stops at 4.2V as you said?
I’m still using it, and it’s been great! I don’t know if I need 4 bays all the time, but it’s nice having them when I need to charge a pair of double a’s for my mouse and an 18650 or two. Having independent channels is nice, and the time to full at 2a is absurd (under 40 mins, but as I have so a handful of batteries to rotate through I usually charge at 200ma to keep the heat down and theoretically ever so slightly increase the life). The testing features are also nice to validate the mah of your batter and that the internal resistance is still within normal operating params.Reaching way back, after long term use, how do you feel about this charger? I was just looking at it (same store too), and trying to decide between that and the $30 cheaper 2-bay Nitecore they suggest that has decent reviews. I figured rotating 2 in and out wouldn't be so bad, but I'm willing to pay a little extra for more convenience/reliability.
Nice, was looking for something like this!There are some current posts regarding some charger choices here:
Any recommendations for a good 4 slot 18650 battery charger?
I have a TM2 incoming and as it's my first battery powered vape I need to pick up a decent charger as well - are there any FC favorites? I tried searching but couldn't really find anything - thanks in advance!fuckcombustion.com
Sorry to bring this old Topic up, but i habe a question to that statement. If a batterie blow up in a hot car, why cant it blow up in a vaporizer where the heater is way hotter and next to the batteries.It's an excellent question that I asked myself as well. I did research the photos but could not find anything definite. More than likely, it was not just the heat but a combination of intense heat and faulty batteries. Bottom line is that intense heat is definitely damaging to the batteries and could be dangerous as well. I never leave my mods in my car (summer or winter) to protect the batteries and to avoid any possible dangers. Awareness + precaution = safety.
it wasn't because of battery failure? or somehow the + touched the -? bad insulator around it?!blow up in a hot car
Sorry to bring this old Topic up, but i habe a question to that statement. If a batterie blow up in a hot car, why cant it blow up in a vaporizer where the heater is way hotter and next to the batteries.
This battery is pretty similar the one POTV selected for the Xmax/POTV V3Pro (samsung 32E), I have no doubts they are experienced enough to choose a good battery... for the v3pro, don't forget the 35E isn't a high discharge rate battery, so it's designed to fit a conduction based vaporizer, and not most convection vaporizers but it can fit our Xmax V3Pro since it's a 8A discharge rate battery and we designed our heater to be less hungry with power. So no worries if you use the battery for the purpose it's designed for.
Yeah don't use it for vapesI bought some vape-related stuff and they threw in a free battery.
Which is nice!
But on the wrapping of the battery it says:
'Fire hazard! Not for vape! Never install, carry or handle!"
So what do i do now? It's in my house but somehow I have to carefully dispose it, without carrying or handling it?
I only have (or buy) Molicel and they don't have that statement. I'm sure it's fine to use it in a vape (or to handle it, with due care) but it's kinda strange to me that a vapeshop hands out batteries that specifically state they can't be used for vaping. Or is that a standard message on most batteries?
I'm gonna live dangerous i reckon and am preparing this battery to be vaped anyhow!
Yup, I use batteries with those warnings in vapes all the time. As long as you know what you're doing is fine. Just some people may not know and do something dangerous.Hi, I believe it's a statment made in order to protect the brand if the customer misuse the battery