Is it possible to power the heltec v3 with NIMH batteries? Like maybe 4 in series (4.8v) or 3 in series (3.6v)?

Would it even charge them or is the charging only for li-ion battery packs like the 3.7v one that everyone suggests?

I don’t want to buy it if I don’t need it, I have old NIMH batteries in abundance and I’m not sure what my final setup should look like yet.

  • @sexy_peach@feddit.orgOP
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    24 months ago

    Onboard SH1.25-2 battery interface, integrated lithium battery management system (charge and discharge management, overcharge protection, battery power detection, USB / battery power automatic switching).

    Seems like this is only for lithium batteries. Maybe it can run off NIMH batteries but not charge them?

    • Admiral Patrick
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      4 months ago

      I’m not familiar with that specific board or the charge circuitry in it, but it does, indeed, sound like it’s designed for lithium (most embedded chargers are these days unless otherwise specified). You’re also correct in that it can run off of any battery within voltage spec, but charging non-lithium batteries would not be recommended.

      I wouldn’t advise it unless you can disable the charging circuit when USB is plugged in. You may be able to put a diode inline with the battery to only allow current to flow out of the battery, but it would drop the voltage a bit. Still, may not be worth it.

      If you really want to use the NiMH batteries, you’d probably be best to run them as a dedicated supply that doesn’t go through the charge circuitry (i.e. don’t use the battery connector).

      More Info: https://rechargemybattery.com/can-i-use-li-ion-charger-to-charge-nimh-rechargeable-batteries/

  • @vext01
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    24 months ago

    My guess is that you could power the board, but charging will end in disaster.

    Nimh isn’t as energy dense as li-ion as I recall? So an 18650 is probably a better bet.