I'm making out my next online order for rc stuff and was wondering how many
battery packs I should buy. I was thinking 4 so that I would always have
atleast 2 on standby. How many batteries do some of you carry to the flying
field with you?
Peter
Mark Lee - 21 May 2004 01:29 GMT
> I'm making out my next online order for rc stuff and was wondering how many
> battery packs I should buy. I was thinking 4 so that I would always have
> atleast 2 on standby. How many batteries do some of you carry to the flying
> field with you?
>
> Peter
How long are the flights you get? I only need to take one with my GWS
Beaver - the 1100mAh Li-po gives me over 30 mins and the 2200 goes for so
long I've always run out of light or time before it's run out of power.
It's good to have 2 batteries just because then I don't have to recharge
every day. They take about 1 and 2 hours respectively to charge.
You take as many as you need to do the flying you can fit in. Depending
on how easy/safe they are to recharge you may not need others at home on
standby.

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Mark Lee
peter walker - 21 May 2004 02:11 GMT
I'm new to this and most things Iv'e read about most electric planes is that
most flights only last for just a few minutes or so, so I was thinking 4
packs would ensure me atleast 15 mins of uninterrupted flight time.
Peter
GamePlayer No. 1058 - 21 May 2004 04:07 GMT
I think it depens on the plane your flying and what battery and motor you
are using.
On my aerobird challenger we got about 20 minutes out of one battery,
granted some of that time, but definately not the majority wa spent gliding.
On my Slowstick I get about 15 minutes out of one 730mah battery pack.
So in my circumstances I would like to have about 3 packs for the slowstick,
and maybe 2 for the aerobird.
But it really depends, on how much you want to fly, and how fast your plane
eats your batteries.
> I'm new to this and most things Iv'e read about most electric planes is that
> most flights only last for just a few minutes or so, so I was thinking 4
> packs would ensure me atleast 15 mins of uninterrupted flight time.
>
> Peter
Ken-Ohki - 21 May 2004 03:12 GMT
I usualy bring 6 packs and 2 planes with me, I use a variable rate due
peak charger.
I usualy charge everything at home the night before, then just pea
them at the field. I get 10 ta 15 out of each one, and can charge
every 30-45 minutes or so. I can usualy fly about 10 times before
have to wait for a pack.
Ken-Ohki
"I make things do what I want them to, The hell with what they ar
designed to do.
--
Ken-Ohk
Scotty - 21 May 2004 04:17 GMT
Batteries for which purpose?
> I'm making out my next online order for rc stuff and was wondering how many
> battery packs I should buy. I was thinking 4 so that I would always have
> atleast 2 on standby. How many batteries do some of you carry to the flying
> field with you?
>
> Peter
Morris Lee - 22 May 2004 14:21 GMT
> I'm making out my next online order for rc stuff and was wondering how many
> battery packs I should buy. I was thinking 4 so that I would always have
> atleast 2 on standby. How many batteries do some of you carry to the flying
> field with you?
>
> Peter
I've heard you need one flying, one cooling down and one charging. However,
it depends on the type of battery, its charge rate, how agressively you fly,
and a number of other things.
Morris
The Natural Philosopher - 24 May 2004 21:36 GMT
>>I'm making out my next online order for rc stuff and was wondering how
>>
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
> it depends on the type of battery, its charge rate, how agressively you fly,
> and a number of other things.
Tonight I walked down to the (flyng) field with acharged LIPO in my
pcket, flew for about half an hour and walked back. Still half full.
> Morris
Scotty - 24 May 2004 23:14 GMT
battery packs for what purpose?
> >>I'm making out my next online order for rc stuff and was wondering how
> >>
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
> > Morris
peter walker - 25 May 2004 00:11 GMT
General Electric RC. I have yet to decide on what plane I'm going to get.
Peter
> battery packs for what purpose?