Ive had 5 batteries in storage for about a year and a half. Thy are showing no green lights before or when I plug them into the charger. Ive tried the supplied charge as well as the smart charger, and nothing. The sixth battery had 1 green before charge and it fully charged.
Anyone have an issue with this?
Long time to leave them unchecked, what does the DJI app say when you get the one good(ish) plugged in? Do you have a multimeter you can test the voltage of these batteries? You may have to charge these cells individually which would mean opening up the battery "pack" and identifying each cell so as to charge each of them one at a time. Did you leave these batteries fully charged or did you physically discharge them to around 50% before you stored them? Five batteries=quite a lot of cash, let's see if we can get these things working.
On the good batt the app says its at 100%. The others are showing 0 voltage on the meter. When they went into storage they were all at 50% or less. Yes, lot of cash to get new ones.
Highasakite Posted at 2017-5-13 12:25
If you feel comfortable with it,Try this technique http://www.pauljc.co.uk/2017/01/18/dji-inspire-one-battery-revival/Safety First! Ken.
Whats got me worried is that no lights at all on or off the charger.
fans93cb8d9b Posted at 2017-5-13 12:27
On the good batt the app says its at 100%. The others are showing 0 voltage on the meter. When they went into storage they were all at 50% or less. Yes, lot of cash to get new ones.
Hi
This is a sad sorry and understanding why your batteries have gone bad in unattended storage. The FW on the batteries back at the time you put these into storage seemed problematic and caused the cells to drop below the minimum threshold of 3.2 volts per cell. The longer they sat around the worst the cells got until they were finally discharged to 0. The only way to save these batteries is to try and put power back into them manually (DYI) and this could be difficult for some users. The idea is to remove the top plastic cover on the battery, unplug the balance lead going to the Intelligent circuit board. You would need to monitor this process closely, connecting a charger to the positive and negative leads soldered to the board. Applying a small amount of current to the battery while watching the cell voltage. If you are lucky, the cells will begin to show charge and the voltage will increase and you are looking for a min of 19.8v before the standard DJI charger will work. See these links below about recovering a low battery
I had 4 batteries that were all dead on arrival (not new). I used the trick above to revive them and while I did manage to successfully revive all 4 batteries only 1 of the 4 batteries now actually works. The other 3 all report dead cells within DJI Go 4. I did try flying with them anyway (my mistake) and almost lost my Inspire when I suddenly got a "Critical Battery Error - Landing" message and my Inspire almost dropped into a tree! From here on out I'm only going to fly with the battery that doesn't list a bad cell, it's just not worth risking my Inspire 1 on the others.
Incidentally, what do I do with these broken batteries? Is there any way I can recycle them with DJI?
You COULD revive them by connecting them directly to the charger and bypassing the electronics as shown in the videos, but they'll more than likely then register with "bad cells" as mine do. Even the one that I thought was ok just came up with a bad cell error while I was flying, so I won't be using it again. Time to buy some more batteries!
Advocate Posted at 2017-5-14 04:57
You COULD revive them by connecting them directly to the charger and bypassing the electronics as shown in the videos, but they'll more than likely then register with "bad cells" as mine do. Even the one that I thought was ok just came up with a bad cell error while I was flying, so I won't be using it again. Time to buy some more batteries!
The procedure won't work for all. My tb47 would not charge even with the electronic board unplugged.
There are 6 cells in each battery. You need to have reading of each individual cell in order to consider what your next cause of action. Even one is bad or at very low voltage, the whole battery will be gone forever unless you repack them with the remaining good ones. But then this is not recommended. If you have reading of individual cells and they still have at least say 2 volt. You then probably open the top and charge them individually and also balance them. If the cells are not balanced or with too high difference in voltage (not more than 0.3 volt among the cells), the app will probably indicate bad cell. I have to agree that batteries are really too expensive compared to equivalent OEM lipo battery, almost 100% more.
DTK Posted at 2017-5-14 19:37
There are 6 cells in each battery. You need to have reading of each individual cell in order to consider what your next cause of action. Even one is bad or at very low voltage, the whole battery will be gone forever unless you repack them with the remaining good ones. But then this is not recommended. If you have reading of individual cells and they still have at least say 2 volt. You then probably open the top and charge them individually and also balance them. If the cells are not balanced or with too high difference in voltage (not more than 0.3 volt among the cells), the app will probably indicate bad cell. I have to agree that batteries are really too expensive compared to equivalent OEM lipo battery, almost 100% more.
I agree DJI batteries are way to expensive , I Understand the need for profit but good grief they are double what others cost .
I agree with Donnie. They are twice the price for maybe half the life.
Wish they'd adopt the normal RC crowd's Li-Po ONLY battery and leave the charging and testing to a separate Smart Charger. No doubt they could increase the warranty from 6 months to a year if they did, but at a loss of profit.