J
Joerg
Guest
Phil Hobbs wrote:

But seriously, then this kind of stuff happens: We open our church to
other groups, mostly for free and to commercial groups for a very modest
fee or donation. Then they use a mike and put it back. Battery still in
there. Now is that still good? Did they use it for a 10min pep talk or a
1-1/2h presentation? Did they turn off the mike during breaks or just
put it under the pulpit?
Same for our own activities. Often a mike is used for just a few
minutes, for example during the children's message, or announcements, or
stage plays. In a church it is next to impossible to tally up all that
so you end up throwing away lots of good 9V alkalines to the tune of a
buck fifty each. We can't do that.
Now if the mfg had been smart and included a wireless batt status
feedback to the audio booth this would be _much_ easier. But they
didn't. Hint to all wireless mike manufacturers: Do that!
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Then you must have a very rich churchOn 01/12/2012 12:59 PM, Joerg wrote:
davew wrote:
On Jan 11, 6:36 pm, Joerg<inva...@invalid.invalid> wrote:
Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Jan 9, 8:17 pm, Joerg<inva...@invalid.invalid> wrote:
Hi Folks,
At church we use several Ansmann Energy 16 chargers and Tenergy 9V
batteries. Long story short they've been good to us but lately not so
much. The charge indicators on the stations fade and it all seems
not to
be all that reliable anymore. Fairly new NiMH batteries peter out
in the
middle of a service and so on. No complaints, we got enough life
out of
this setup. So, looking for a new solution here. We have to stay
with 9V
because the (expensive) wireless mikes need these and I'd would
like to
move to 7-cell instead of 6-cell. Read some good reviews about the
Maha/Powerex brand:
http://www.amazon.com/PowerEx-MH-C490F-DCW-Worldwide-Battery-Charger/...
They also have low discharge 9V 230mAh batteries which sounds nice.
However, I am not familiar with this brand. Maybe someone here is? Or
knows of even better systems?
Must be fully automatic, meaning stick the batteries in there no
matter
what their remaining charge is and leave them in the charger until
next
Sunday.
9V batteries with two LiIon cells in there are, of course, the
ultimate
cat's meouw. But they seem not to be ready for prime time yet, I
could
not find multi-bay chargers and I am afraid someone will accidentally
stick them into a regular charger and .. KABLAM.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
What's your problem you can't refurbish the chargers? If they're not
fast charge, they're dirt simple fixed current sources on a timer.
Not these. They are crammed with electronics, all uC controlled with
battery diagnostics and the whole enchilada. If I had a schematic I
could repair them. And I did repair one where somthing in the primary
switcher had blown. But those things don't seem to last and there comes
a point where repairing gets old. Also, it is absolutely no fun to find
out Sunday morning at 7:30am that all the batteries are dead and
worship
service begins shortly. This happened three days ago :-(
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
If you don't want sudden drop-outs, use conventional top brand
alkaline e.g. Duracell + or whatever they're called over there. Plus
you really should have some of these for back-up if it's that mission
critical. ...
We have them for backup but that gets expensive. Because some mikes are
rarely used but must be kept up. Then you remove a $1.50 battery and
must throw it out because the voltage won't tell you how much juice has
been taken out already.
... In my experience (in good quality radio mics) they last
plenty of time and fail a bit more slowly/gracefully than I would
expect a rechargeable to. Plus since your batteries will always be
reasonably new, you will get a good feel for how often you need to
replace them as part of a regular replacement schedule.
We had that in our earlier years. They would acutally last less than
NiMH and failure in the middle of service was just as bad.
What we used to do was to store the mics without batteries, and cram a
new one in every time it was used.
But seriously, then this kind of stuff happens: We open our church to
other groups, mostly for free and to commercial groups for a very modest
fee or donation. Then they use a mike and put it back. Battery still in
there. Now is that still good? Did they use it for a 10min pep talk or a
1-1/2h presentation? Did they turn off the mike during breaks or just
put it under the pulpit?
Same for our own activities. Often a mike is used for just a few
minutes, for example during the children's message, or announcements, or
stage plays. In a church it is next to impossible to tally up all that
so you end up throwing away lots of good 9V alkalines to the tune of a
buck fifty each. We can't do that.
Now if the mfg had been smart and included a wireless batt status
feedback to the audio booth this would be _much_ easier. But they
didn't. Hint to all wireless mike manufacturers: Do that!
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/