Reviving 'dead' PP3 NiMH?

T

Terry Pinnell

Guest
Some of my PP3s steadfastly refuse to recharge. Neither in my
'intelligent' nor basic chargers. Despite being years old, I'm
reluctant to dump them. Any tips from others who have managed to bring
these back into service please?

--
Terry, East Grinstead, UK
 
On Tue, 20 Oct 2015 08:58:57 +0100, Terry Pinnell wrote:

Some of my PP3s steadfastly refuse to recharge. Neither in my
'intelligent' nor basic chargers. Despite being years old, I'm reluctant
to dump them. Any tips from others who have managed to bring these back
into service please?

They likely developed thin internal shorts into one or more elements,
this happens often in NiMhs.
Like other NiMh cells you can attempt to "zap" them a few times with
a short high current/voltage pulse, such as a big capacitor discharge,
until all thin shorts are gone and the charger sees them as chargeable
again.
It usually works, especially well on single cells (D, AA, etc), but
don't trust that battery anymore as it will develop a short again one day.
 
On Tue, 20 Oct 2015 08:58:57 +0100, Terry Pinnell wrote:

Some of my PP3s steadfastly refuse to recharge. Neither in my
'intelligent' nor basic chargers. Despite being years old, I'm reluctant
to dump them. Any tips from others who have managed to bring these back
into service please?

I know the old nicads had internal shorts (an actual 0 volts or a
millivolt or two, measured at the terminals). I'd recover them with a
large cap 100,000 uf charged to 25-40 volts then zap them and read the
voltage. There'd be a few tenths of a volt indicating that the short was
gone.

But if these batteries of yours have been siting around in a discharged
state you may get them working by zapping them but they will never
perform anywhere like they did when new.
 
default wrote:
I know the old nicads had internal shorts (an actual 0 volts or a
millivolt or two, measured at the terminals). I'd recover them with a
large cap 100,000 uf charged to 25-40 volts then zap them and read the
voltage. There'd be a few tenths of a volt indicating that the short was
gone.

** I found connecting a good NiCd cell in parallel with a shorted one did the trick - with minimal risk.

Shorted cells in a pack you cannot access is more difficult to fix and in a 9V battery near impossible.


But if these batteries of yours have been siting around in a discharged
state you may get them working by zapping them but they will never
perform anywhere like they did when new.

** Old NiMH cells are not prone to shorting, but simply lose capacity and can self discharge in a day or so.


.... Phil
 
default <default@defaulter.net> wrote:

On Tue, 20 Oct 2015 08:58:57 +0100, Terry Pinnell wrote:

Some of my PP3s steadfastly refuse to recharge. Neither in my
'intelligent' nor basic chargers. Despite being years old, I'm reluctant
to dump them. Any tips from others who have managed to bring these back
into service please?

I know the old nicads had internal shorts (an actual 0 volts or a
millivolt or two, measured at the terminals). I'd recover them with a
large cap 100,000 uf charged to 25-40 volts then zap them and read the
voltage. There'd be a few tenths of a volt indicating that the short was
gone.

But if these batteries of yours have been siting around in a discharged
state you may get them working by zapping them but they will never
perform anywhere like they did when new.

Thanks both. Zapped them all yesterday and most are at least now
charging. But I note your cautionary warnings. Only intend to use for
old stuff in the shed.

--
Terry, East Grinstead, UK
 
On Wed, 21 Oct 2015 10:13:42 +0100, Terry Pinnell <me@somewhere.invalid>
wrote as underneath :

default <default@defaulter.net> wrote:

On Tue, 20 Oct 2015 08:58:57 +0100, Terry Pinnell wrote:

Some of my PP3s steadfastly refuse to recharge. Neither in my
'intelligent' nor basic chargers. Despite being years old, I'm reluctant
to dump them. Any tips from others who have managed to bring these back
into service please?

I know the old nicads had internal shorts (an actual 0 volts or a
millivolt or two, measured at the terminals). I'd recover them with a
large cap 100,000 uf charged to 25-40 volts then zap them and read the
voltage. There'd be a few tenths of a volt indicating that the short was
gone.

But if these batteries of yours have been siting around in a discharged
state you may get them working by zapping them but they will never
perform anywhere like they did when new.

Thanks both. Zapped them all yesterday and most are at least now
charging. But I note your cautionary warnings. Only intend to use for
old stuff in the shed.

Rechargeable PP3 were always expensive but we have here
Hibrio/Eneloop/already charged type PP3 which have low self discharge
character, and they have been fully reliable even when left to totally
flatten in equipment at times. Ocasionally Lidl (UK) have these at 2.99
ea which is a very good price even compared with eBay, but you have to
be careful not to get the non ready charged type which is what you have
already! C+
 
On Thu, 22 Oct 2015 07:50:18 +0100, Charlie+ wrote:

On Wed, 21 Oct 2015 10:13:42 +0100, Terry Pinnell <me@somewhere.invalid
wrote as underneath :

default <default@defaulter.net> wrote:

On Tue, 20 Oct 2015 08:58:57 +0100, Terry Pinnell wrote:

Some of my PP3s steadfastly refuse to recharge. Neither in my
'intelligent' nor basic chargers. Despite being years old, I'm
reluctant to dump them. Any tips from others who have managed to
bring these back into service please?

I know the old nicads had internal shorts (an actual 0 volts or a
millivolt or two, measured at the terminals). I'd recover them with a
large cap 100,000 uf charged to 25-40 volts then zap them and read the
voltage. There'd be a few tenths of a volt indicating that the short
was gone.

But if these batteries of yours have been siting around in a discharged
state you may get them working by zapping them but they will never
perform anywhere like they did when new.

Thanks both. Zapped them all yesterday and most are at least now
charging. But I note your cautionary warnings. Only intend to use for
old stuff in the shed.

Rechargeable PP3 were always expensive but we have here
Hibrio/Eneloop/already charged type PP3 which have low self discharge
character, and they have been fully reliable even when left to totally
flatten in equipment at times. Ocasionally Lidl (UK) have these at 2.99
ea which is a very good price even compared with eBay, but you have to
be careful not to get the non ready charged type which is what you have
already! C+

I second the low self discharge batteries. With others, especially in a
pack, it seems I'm never sure of the charge remaining, and trust is
everything when you are away from home.
 

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