|
|
|
|
|
by kwiens
637 days ago
|
|
I agree with you. We wanted to use individual 18650 cells so badly! We designed the whole thing that way. We did exactly what you proposed, and built cell balancing circuitry and code. It worked great! Then we went to the safety certification bodies and they said, absolutely not, there is no way you can sell that. We tried so many avenues to persuade them, from proposing 18650s with built-in safety circuitry to showing the safety system that we designed into the pack. No dice. There are a variety of safety standards to blame, but the primary one is UL 1642. It needs to change. I'm planning to join the standards body to see if I can shift things. Our pack is a set of six 18650s welded together with a standard connector.
https://valkyrie.cdn.ifixit.com/media/2024/09/10113528/iFixi... We'll sell replacement battery packs. Or you can make your own. |
|
A compact temperature control widget without batteries at all.
It accepts the appropriate USB PD power input in a standards-compliant way. It has a knob, and also a screen for status. It talks to the soldering iron and provides power to it. It does not have batteries or any special facilities for batteries *though if a user chooses to use it with an appropriate USB PD battery then they certainly can). This all seems possible, and adherence to USB PD specifications should tend to make it safe by default.
The rub, and this may not be possible at all, is that it must be substantially cheaper than soldering iron itself.
But because you've done the right thing and documented the protocol, then maybe someone else will implement this (as DIY or otherwise) and it won't be your problem at all. :)