power supply?
#2
I use the Motive Power Brick.It’s only 60 amps so might not meet your charging requirements.The Fantom units are good and are at 75 amps.
#4
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 6,410
From: Austin,TX
I have instructions here on how to convert an HP supply which is fairly easy to do in minutes with basic soldering skills:
https://www.rcgroups.com/forums/show...0#post43199655
https://www.rcgroups.com/forums/show...0#post43199655
#5
What charger is being used?
What are your charging practices (what charge rates/how fast do you charge)?
What are your largest LiPo packs (cell count/capacity)?
I was sort of in same situation, but I needed a 24V power supply to get better use out of a charger's potential power. A charger needing input of ≥24V to get its maximum power... you may run into underwhelming performance with a 12V power supply.
#7
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 6,410
From: Austin,TX
According to the manual, the charger is rated for 10V min -49V max input and doesn't specify any variance for power output depending on voltage input:
https://images.amainhobbies.com/imag...ger_Manual.pdf
That said I would go with a 12V supply to keep costs and space/weight to a minimum
https://images.amainhobbies.com/imag...ger_Manual.pdf
That said I would go with a 12V supply to keep costs and space/weight to a minimum

#8
According to the manual, the charger is rated for 10V min -49V max input and doesn't specify any variance for power output depending on voltage input:
https://images.amainhobbies.com/imag...ger_Manual.pdf
That said I would go with a 12V supply to keep costs and space/weight to a minimum
https://images.amainhobbies.com/imag...ger_Manual.pdf
That said I would go with a 12V supply to keep costs and space/weight to a minimum

The input current is limited to 60A, with a 12v PSU you are limited to a 700w charge but that is still within the mentioned needs.
#9
The questions I have are:
What charger is being used?
What are your charging practices (what charge rates/how fast do you charge)?
What are your largest LiPo packs (cell count/capacity)?
I was sort of in same situation, but I needed a 24V power supply to get better use out of a charger's potential power. A charger needing input of ≥24V to get its maximum power... you may run into underwhelming performance with a 12V power supply.
What charger is being used?
What are your charging practices (what charge rates/how fast do you charge)?
What are your largest LiPo packs (cell count/capacity)?
I was sort of in same situation, but I needed a 24V power supply to get better use out of a charger's potential power. A charger needing input of ≥24V to get its maximum power... you may run into underwhelming performance with a 12V power supply.
#10
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 6,410
From: Austin,TX
much appreciated for including that important spec!
using watts law
W = V x A
700W - 10% charger inefficiency = 630W usable load
6S = 6 x 4.2V = 25.2V
630W / 25.2V = 25A
So you can charge 1 pack at 25A max or 2 packs at 12.5A each port without stressing a 12V PS where the supply I linked above is rated for 750W.
#11
Tech Master
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,997
From: Wa state USA
#12
Thank you all for the great info. But now that I have a power supply for indoor, New outdoor track has no power and was looking into a lifepo4 battery as a power bank. What are the opinions on a 250 ah lifepo4 to charge two 7600 6s or two 9000 2s for a race day. Never both classes on the same day
#13
Thank you all for the great info. But now that I have a power supply for indoor, New outdoor track has no power and was looking into a lifepo4 battery as a power bank. What are the opinions on a 250 ah lifepo4 to charge two 7600 6s or two 9000 2s for a race day. Never both classes on the same day
#15
That is going to depend. How many times do you need to charge the 6S batteries? How many mAh do you generally put back into them?
250Ah LiFePO4 - 12.8V - 3200W
7600mAh 6S - 25.2V - 191.52W <-- Full charge, not likely using all the capacity, so figure maybe 50%? Let's error on the side of caution and say 100W per charge.
Not dropping below 20% charge on the LiFePO4 gives you approximately 25 charges.
With a 100A battery you would get about 10.
There will most likely be some inefficiency needed to be accounted for, plus whatever else you want to power. I would feel comfortable saying you can get 8 charges of 50% or less and power whatever else you need (small things) with a 100Ah battery.
You need to do the math, add some overhead and try to stay above 20% charge on the LiFePO4.
250Ah LiFePO4 - 12.8V - 3200W
7600mAh 6S - 25.2V - 191.52W <-- Full charge, not likely using all the capacity, so figure maybe 50%? Let's error on the side of caution and say 100W per charge.
Not dropping below 20% charge on the LiFePO4 gives you approximately 25 charges.
With a 100A battery you would get about 10.
There will most likely be some inefficiency needed to be accounted for, plus whatever else you want to power. I would feel comfortable saying you can get 8 charges of 50% or less and power whatever else you need (small things) with a 100Ah battery.
You need to do the math, add some overhead and try to stay above 20% charge on the LiFePO4.



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