VPescado
DELAYED DUE TO A TRAIN DERAILMENT
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2004
- Messages
- 215
Putting NiCad (or NiMH) cells in parallel is NOT recommended.
These cells have a peculiar voltage vs charge curve. As they come up to full charge the curve flattens, and the voltage then falls slightly as more charge is added (partly due to the cell heating during charge).
If you connect freshly charged cells in parallel, then the cells will try to equalise voltage with each other, but because of the negative slope on part of the curve, this can result in a runaway situation. In exceptional circumstances this may even result in fire, but will more likely just partially discharge some of the parallel cells while damaging others by overcharging/overheating.
The one time when it's okay to connect Nickle cells in parallel is when you're about to discharge them fast. If you intend to put sufficient load on the cells to flatten them in, say, ten minutes, then the internal resistance of the cells means that they all only discharge, rather than attempt to transfer charge to each other.
Can't you get around this by using diodes to prevent the backwash?