cloudcuckoo
Vendor
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2015
- Messages
- 3,852
That's not the way it works at all. In the previous posted example firing a 1ohm load would be a max of 12.6A, with a series setup each battery would be providing 12.6A regardless of it's position in the circuit. Within reason and with fairly equally matched internal resistance of the batteries this should be pretty damn close.
Not Trying to be a cunt, just 12V is quite extreme.
12.6V @ 1Ω = 158W @ 12.6A (so within your batteries limits).
But, is the MOD regulated with a MOSFET, as 12A is over the ratting of the vast majority of switches.....meaning one-day it could decide to fuse the poles in the switch and stay firing, and a very unpleasant chain of events.
...That's not the way it works at all. In the previous posted example firing a 1ohm load would be a max of 12.6A, with a series setup each battery would be providing 12.6A regardless of it's position in the circuit. Within reason and with fairly equally matched internal resistance of the batteries this should be pretty damn close.
This is where people go wrong. They assume they're getting the full 12.6v
Nothing wrong with calculating safety parameters based on perfect components values (this is standard practice), the problem is when people use ~ as a safety parameter.