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Happy Octave Day of Christmas (and also Happy New Year.)
01/01/2025 at 22:03 • 0 commentsWishing everyone a happy Octave Day of Christmas and a Happy New Year. May God give you and your family many blessings and provide you the grace to deal with any hardships you many face/are currently facing.
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It begins, again.
08/11/2024 at 03:11 • 0 commentsGot a temporary pond again from all the recent rain in my area. Pond means the frog chorus comes out, which means tadpoles (or tadpole eggs in the picture above.) Looks like after three years, the third season of raising tadpoles is beginning.
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Teardown and partial schematics of a battery charger
03/10/2024 at 04:47 • 0 commentsI got bored one day, so I cracked open a battery charger I got. I was curious if it was just a dumb charger when it came to 9v batteries like many chargers out there, or it actually monitored the state of charge. The model of the charger: EBL-C802.
With it opened up:It quickly became obvious why this charger requires charging AA/AAA cells in pairs. It charges two cells in series. It's likely done this way as a cost reduction measure. Sadly the main chip that controls the charging is missing a label, almost certainly sanded off.
Below is a schematic for the AA/AAA charging circuit. There's two circuits for charging two pairs in total. It's a pretty simple circuit. A mosfet is turned on/off to control charging and voltage of the two cells in series is monitored by the controller chip though a 10K ohm resistor.
Below is a schematic for the 9V charging circuit. There's two circuits as two 9V batteries can be charged at a time. This circuit is a bit more interesting. It doesn't operate as a dumb charger as the controller chip is apparently monitoring the battery voltage via a resistor divider. The circuit trickle charges the battery even when the B772 transistor is turned off via a 3K ohm resistor.
I have some other observations to note about the charger, but it's close to midnight for me. I'll be sure to update the page later.
Thanks for like to my project https://hackaday.io/project/164233-leavening-cell