Burkeomatic
1 µW
Hi everyone. I am a little ways into battery building and I wanted to learn more about it so I signed up for an account here. I am mainly building RC battery packs (and wanting higher current than nickel strips can provide) but I also want to build an E-Bike as well.
I am interested in learning/doing the copper/nickel sandwich method. I quickly realized that my fleabay spot welder which struggles with .15mm nickel wouldn't be up to the task of welding copper.
I was guided to buying a kweld, and I have the basic kit, but it is a little intimidating and I was just looking for some help and moral support getting started, and you all seem like a good bunch, so I decided instead of lurking I would sign up.
I bought the kweld, but nothing else, and I was told that my Lipo packs should be enough in parallel.
This is roughly the advice I received.
These are the lipo packs I have which are know to be of quality in testing on that side of the world.
rcbattery.com
I did not purchase the K-cap or anything else, and I am trying to avoid having a big honking car battery laying around.
I just wanted to double check with you all, and see if I am headed the right direction. I don't want to blow anything up and I hate being electrocuted. My batteries thus far, while ugly, have been functional, and I built a 4s2p molicel p42 pack with triple nickel stacks that hold up in a pretty powerful twin motor I have that can pull 35-40amps, but the triple stack nickel is the worst! And after reading, that is really less than optimal, and I would like to learn how to do it the best and cleanest way I can. I'm not opposed to buying more gear if need be, but of course would prefer not to.
It looks like I'll need 50-70 Joules to pull this off from what I have read so far.
I am interested in learning/doing the copper/nickel sandwich method. I quickly realized that my fleabay spot welder which struggles with .15mm nickel wouldn't be up to the task of welding copper.
I was guided to buying a kweld, and I have the basic kit, but it is a little intimidating and I was just looking for some help and moral support getting started, and you all seem like a good bunch, so I decided instead of lurking I would sign up.
I bought the kweld, but nothing else, and I was told that my Lipo packs should be enough in parallel.
This is roughly the advice I received.
Calibrate with one 3S/6000 Lipo and weld with 2 in-parallel. 2 will over-current the Kweld preventing it from calibrating. I don't use the K-cap add-on. Just use the basic kit. Use quality Lipos.
These are the lipo packs I have which are know to be of quality in testing on that side of the world.

Liperior 5000mAh 3S 35C 11.1V Lipo Battery With XT90 Plug for RC Plane / Heli / Car / Boat
The Liperior battery has been developed using the latest in Lipo technology. Our research and development team has been working tirelessly to come up with a superior pack for you that delivers on quality, power, durability, and price.

I did not purchase the K-cap or anything else, and I am trying to avoid having a big honking car battery laying around.
I just wanted to double check with you all, and see if I am headed the right direction. I don't want to blow anything up and I hate being electrocuted. My batteries thus far, while ugly, have been functional, and I built a 4s2p molicel p42 pack with triple nickel stacks that hold up in a pretty powerful twin motor I have that can pull 35-40amps, but the triple stack nickel is the worst! And after reading, that is really less than optimal, and I would like to learn how to do it the best and cleanest way I can. I'm not opposed to buying more gear if need be, but of course would prefer not to.
It looks like I'll need 50-70 Joules to pull this off from what I have read so far.