57. MRH14-11-Nov2014-P - page 169

via eBay
as “Lithium battery
charging 5V step up, protection all-in-one PCB.” I use a 240
MAH battery because it is small and fits many of my models,
but larger single-cell LiPos will work too, if they meet the physi-
cal space requirements. You should note the rating pictured on
each battery of 20C or 30C. This is the maximum charging rate
specified for the specific battery. This would refer to 30 times
240 milliamps or 7.2 amps max charging rate. Or 20 times 250
milliamps or 5 amps max charging rate. These charging rates
should never be exceeded, to prevent damage to the battery.
Some LiPo batteries come with a small battery manager circuit
board embedded in the battery package, but many, particularly
the small LiPos, do not have them.
The first battery manager board I used expects 5 volts input
to the board. We will use track power (DC or DCC) for board
power. First, we convert track power to DC with a full wave
bridge rectifier, and then regulate it to 5 volts. The bridge
rectifier is a 1.5 amp DF01 bridge rectifier from
.
The first attempt used a 5 volt, 1 amp
LM2940CT-5.0/NOPB-ND from
,
similar to a com-
mon LM7805. But the peak current draw (charging a very low
battery) was close to 900 milliamps, and the regulator ran quite
5
5. Basic power block schematic.
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