Quote:
Originally Posted by mxmtech
Nicad batteries have a temperature sensor that stops the current, right?
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Wrong! NiCads require special charging techniques. Depending on the manufacture, but generally they all require a constant current method. The two best ways to determine when the battery is fully charged is a delta voltage rise, or temperature rise. Tempurture is hard to do. Voltage is easy, it just takes some logic or A/D comparators.
Here is a fantastic circuit using a PIC. It can be modified to operate at any voltage or current (well up to 42 volts, higher and you would need to use a different comparator or modify to limit voltage) . I have built a few of these myself. It does not matter what the DOD of the battery is to start with and will never over charge a battery, and when finnished will deliver a trickle charge to keep it 100%. If your battery can handle a 1C charge rate, maximum time is 1 hour and 15 minutes.