Ideally charge or top off a few hours before you fly, morning for and afternoon flight kind of thing. No rigid rule, but not days, as the battery will have lost some charge. Night before is fine as necessary
Thanks for the tip.
What is your max time before topping-up? I.e. the battery was fully charged and the auto-discharge has not yet kicked in. How many hours or days until you top-up before flight? 12 hours? 1day? 10 days?
The difference is if you power down or not.
If you land and stay powered up - then I agree - you still are in relatively safe situation - just don't exceed total flight time.
But if you power down and then power up again ... that's a different matter as the Battery sense is now out of kilter and leads to the events that many have experienced ...
Nigel
I know the conventional wisdom is to not power down on a partially discharged battery then power back up and fly again with that same battery.
My question:
If I fly for a while then land and power down at, say, 72%... then 5, 10, 15 minutes later power back up and the battery level still displays in the app at 72% and the individual cell voltages are exactly the same as before I powered off, how is the battery sensor 'out of kilter'?
The age old problemm with ESC's and batterys was the LVC. Originally because ESC's came from NiCd / conventional battery techno - the % LVC was based on starting voltage. You can imagine this is not a good system as :
Thanks for the lesson on ESCs and battery evolution. I think that the more one knows about the evolution of a product they're using, the better they understand the current version.
Though I still can't imagine why the LVC ( low voltage cutoff?) would be based on a percentage of starting voltage, as you said. I'm sure it must have something to do with the battery chemistry of the day.
So you think the FW may be the 'culprit' here?
Whatever the reason ... as said - try not to fly with partial discharged batterys.
O believe me, heeding the advice of the long-timers around here has served me well in my short one year of Phantom ownership.
But I soak it all in, mix it all up, and come up with my own -hopefully logical- conclusions.
....
We have reports of partial charged batterys shutting down too early and AC landing out. Why ? I don't think anyone can really answer that. I don't think my explanation of ESC and evolution is the real answer either. It has to do with how FW etc. see's the battery and operation.
Of course the simple answer is to not use partial charge battery !
Nigel
Welcome. Since we (and perhaps you) don’t know how long between flights, let’s revert to general guidelines. All these batteries are best stored at between 40-60% of full charge.
The app will enable you to set the built in battery management how many days after fully charged, that it should start self discharging to get charge down to target storage %. I personally set mine to 2 days - plenty of views on this.
So, after a flight, if you have discharged a battery substantially, say to between 10-30% of charge, I’d charge, once battery cools (repeat don’t charge till battery is cool!) to either 100%, or, if battery not going to be used for a while, just charge to above 50% as that’s the ideal storage charge for these batteries.
As you summarised correctly - charge battery to 100% before you fly.
Much more reading available on this, some very well educated battery technicians contribute to this subject from time to time, I’m not one of them, just summarising best practice..
If I turn on each battery will is reset the timer and give me another 4 days before discharging?
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