Bad NXT Battery?
Posted: 20 Mar 2012, 00:49
Greetings,
I'm new to this forum, just having discovered it.
I have an old dark gray NXT battery (the one Lego calls the "AC" battery). It does not charge with the AC charger anymore. The output voltage is about 5.4V and doesn't change when the charger is plugged in. The green light glows but not the red light.
I have a suspicion I would like to confirm and find out if anyone else has encountered this problem. One of our AC chargers died. I emailed LegoEducation and they told me the AC charger has been discontinued but I can buy one that matches the specs and use that. The specs are 9 - 12V AC at > 700 mA, I believe.
So, I found a Triad supply that is listed as 12 V AC at 1000 mA. I tried it once and it seemed to charge the battery (i.e., red and green light glow for a while, then green light only. The battery seemed fully charged). Now this same battery is dead as detailed above. I measured the no-load voltage of this Triad unit and it reads 15.0 V. An old Lego charger, that is listed as being 10.8V AC at 700 mA measures 12.0 V no-load. Note: my inexpensive DVM is probably not a true RMS reading meter and I don't know what kind of wave form these power supplies put out.
Did I kill my battery with this "12 V AC" supply? Has anyone else experienced this kind of issue?
Thanks.
John
I'm new to this forum, just having discovered it.
I have an old dark gray NXT battery (the one Lego calls the "AC" battery). It does not charge with the AC charger anymore. The output voltage is about 5.4V and doesn't change when the charger is plugged in. The green light glows but not the red light.
I have a suspicion I would like to confirm and find out if anyone else has encountered this problem. One of our AC chargers died. I emailed LegoEducation and they told me the AC charger has been discontinued but I can buy one that matches the specs and use that. The specs are 9 - 12V AC at > 700 mA, I believe.
So, I found a Triad supply that is listed as 12 V AC at 1000 mA. I tried it once and it seemed to charge the battery (i.e., red and green light glow for a while, then green light only. The battery seemed fully charged). Now this same battery is dead as detailed above. I measured the no-load voltage of this Triad unit and it reads 15.0 V. An old Lego charger, that is listed as being 10.8V AC at 700 mA measures 12.0 V no-load. Note: my inexpensive DVM is probably not a true RMS reading meter and I don't know what kind of wave form these power supplies put out.
Did I kill my battery with this "12 V AC" supply? Has anyone else experienced this kind of issue?
Thanks.
John