NiFe?..NiCad?

Started by tecnodave, March 09, 2019, 06:50:58 PM

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tecnodave

Hello all,

I just scored these, labels are conflicting!  Help!

The jars are full, electrolyte is clear, no black buildup on plates. Not tested yet.

Removed from 1950's dinner train cars long abondoned, there are more, not exactly the same but very similar looking. Am going back to secure them.

Curious enough to try to recover.

David

Edit>. The cell connecting straps covers  have the word EDISON moulded into the plastic. Cell jars are clear plastic. Sun shining through battery has a rosy pink hue to the electrolyte. The electrodes are shiny metal so these probably are ni-cad but the yellow labels on the end are glue on, and not well attached?  Tops of batteries had a thin film of old oil with much dirt embedded, very carefully cleaning batteries now. Voltages .700 and .800 so fairly dead. (set of 5 cells). Haven't removed cell strap covers yet, it appears to be separate cells  with terminals bolted together.  Any help/ advice would be greatly appreciated. I have never worked with wet ni-cad cells before
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

tecnodave

A few more pic's

#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

mike90045

Not sure how to tell the difference.  They both use pretty much the same electrolyte as I recall, I know NiFe can use float oil.
http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Solar

Classic 200| 2Kw PV, 160Voc | Grundfos 10 SO5-9 with 3 wire Franklin Electric motor (1/2hp 240V 1ph )| Listeroid 6/1, st5 gen head | XW6048 inverter/chgr | midnight ePanel & 4 SPDs | 48V, 800A NiFe battery bank | MS-TS-MPPT60 w/3Kw PV

ClassicCrazy

years ago there was someone around here who used to get the nicads from railroad cars . I think he said you had to change the electrolyte to recondition them - but that was a long time ago.

Larry
system 1
Classic 150 , 5s3p  Kyocera 135watt , 12s Soneil 2v 540amp lead crystal for 24v pack , Outback 3524 inverter
system 2
 5s 135w Kyocero , 3s3p 270w Kyocera  to Classic 150 ,   8s Kyocera 225w to Hawkes Bay Jakiper 48v 15kwh LiFePO4 , Outback VFX 3648 inverter
system 3
KID / Brat portable

tecnodave

#4
Mike,

I have been reading up on this. The ni cad came first then evolved into ni-fe. The chemistry is the same. What is troubling me is the second photo on the first post. The logo is NiFe but the label clearly states that this is a ni cad. I'm thinking that with a nickle electrode plate and a iron plate ,as in ni fe that one plate would be more darker colored like steel but these plates are rather shiney. I know that the inventor first pantened ni cad then later patented the ni fe process before Edison started experimenting. As far as I've read Edison only made ni fe and not ni cad. I'm not sure that these are Edison cells but the yellow covers over the cell connector straps are embossed "Edison". But in the cases I only see the NiFe logo. The yellow label tells a different story!  I don't know what to think of that.

So when you service yours what do you clean up with.  So far I have not used any cleaning compounds as I have never dealt with potassium hydroxide . I'm using dampened newspaper to remove debris and oil from the cases.

I'm not sure just where these were used but the dinner train has been abandoned for quite a while now. They might have been in the locomotive but that doesn't make sense as locomotives are 600 volt DC for traction and dynamic braking and 72 DC volts for controls and lighting. Cabooses are 12 volts for radio and lights. A freind found them and brought them to me. I will see the train again tomorrow.

Read the Wikipedia article on history of the Ni Fe cells but forgot the real inverters name, Edison just worked on the original design before patenting the Ni Fe battery in America, his forerunner was about 40 years ahead of Edison.

David
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

tecnodave

Larry,

Yes these are from an old rail car, not sure just which one, my shop is next to the Union Pacific rail yards in Pajaro, across the river from Watsonville.  Santa Cruz county bought the Watsonville/Santa Cruz/Davenport branch line from UP to run a tourist/dinner train. The train was brought in from Davenport Iowa and was never realized. It sits abandoned in the UP rail yards. The operator was fired and run out of town for dumping 250 oil can tank cars on the tracks in Santa Cruz county. We have a new local operator who is doing better. They are going to restore rail service here Yah! We export Redwood locally harvested and trucking it out is a bear!  I hear bad things about Progressive Rail but they have the contract now.

Two stories now that I've heard, these are from the rear end of the locomotive and the dining car. I will visit the train in the morning to see if there are more of these.

It seems the the charge profile is very similar for both types.

Anyone know where to purchase electrolyte solution  KOH,  it's probably a controlled substance here

David
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

bee88man

KOH is cmmon lye...sold for soap making, for one use...

tecnodave

Beeman88,

Thanks for that tidbit of information,  yup chemistry is my weak point, never really studied really.

TD
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

mike90045

Quote from: tecnodave on March 10, 2019, 11:24:19 AM
Beeman88,

Thanks for that tidbit of information,  yup chemistry is my weak point, never really studied really.

TD

NO !!
Common lye / drain cleaner is SODIUM hydroxide

Alkaline battery electrolyte is POTASSIUM hydroxide.  The KoH is much more efficient as electrolyte, than the NaoH

Here's the link to my commissioning my NiFe bank pages.   The reason the electrolyte needs to be changed, is after 10 years, it's poisoned from absorbing Co2 from the atmosphere, hence the float oil to slow that down.

The metal inside will stay shiny, and not rust.   if exposed to air, it will rust and be ruined.  if rinsed with plain water, it will instantly start to rust and be ruined.  Leave the old alkaline electrolyte in it, until you are ready to flush and refill with fresh mix.    The mix, as you mix the KoH flake into distilled water, will heat to nearly boiling.   i use new, plastic 5 gall buckets and covered with saran wrap after mixing.  Don't try to move them, they will burst from the hot electrolyte inside.

Initial prep:    Oct 2011
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.209715335768594&type=1&l=9747e4dde6

Jul 2018 refresh electrolyte (My replacement shoulder was working well, and I had a helper, so why wait 2 more years)
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.2113125788760863&type=1&l=1988b7f97a

The mix I used was:  (can't recall if oz or grams)
Water  8651
KoH  2403
L    168    (Lithium helps retard the Co2 poisoning)

This link has charge information
https://ironedison.com/images/DOCS/Iron_Edison_Nickel_Iron_Owner%27s_Manual.pdf

a fun site   https://www.nickel-iron-battery.com

and here's a mfg's manual with the mix ratios in it
http://nickelcells.com/pdf/manuf/Operation%20Manual%20of%20CHANGHONG%20Ni-Fe%20cell.pdf





http://tinyurl.com/LMR-Solar

Classic 200| 2Kw PV, 160Voc | Grundfos 10 SO5-9 with 3 wire Franklin Electric motor (1/2hp 240V 1ph )| Listeroid 6/1, st5 gen head | XW6048 inverter/chgr | midnight ePanel & 4 SPDs | 48V, 800A NiFe battery bank | MS-TS-MPPT60 w/3Kw PV

Westbranch

#9
Dave, I looked into the SAFT  (French co.) that is probably the #1 NiCd maker now, as I have several sets of 100Ah cells
There was a British company called NIFE and it was bought out by SAFT ~ 20 yrs ago iirc.  I suspect they may be from that company.

I will see if I can locate some brochures/instructions I got with the cells.

You can also go to the SAFT site and most of their owners manuals have maintenance but no longer include the mixing instructions for the electrolyte. It is a difficult site as they probably assume they only get industrial and Military visitors...
KID FW1811 560W >C&D 24V 900Ah AGM
CL150 29032 FW V.2126-NW2097-GP2133 175A E-Panel WBjr, 3Px4s 140W > 24V 900Ah AGM,
2 Cisco WRT54GL i/c DD-WRT Rtr, NetGr DS104Hub
Cotek ST1500 Inv  want a 24V  ROSIE Inverter
OmniCharge3024  Eu1/2/3000iGens
West Chilcotin 1680+W to come

tecnodave

#10
Mike,

Thanks so much for that information, I will need all the help that I can get on this. I'm pretty darn good at FLA batteries but this is new to me.

I have not touched the contents of the cells but am removing years of crust from outer casings, there is a thin film of light oil on the tops of the cases with much dust mixed in.  I will read your procedure before attempting to clean and flush.  I do know not to use mineral water. I keep distilled water on hand for my LA battery sets and I manufacture colloidal silver using distilled water for personal use.

In testing various distilled waters some leave a black oxide on my 4-9  silver electrodes (.9999% purity). used in the colloidal silver manufacturing process. Arrowhead puritas distilled water does not!
This is the only brand that I use

Found this morning:

These are Edison Ni-Cad cells , I googled the model number "Ed-80 battery" and got this:

https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6640930-maintaining-edison-nickel-cadmium-batteries

Article clearly states that Edison did manufacture these Ni-Cad's in four sizes, 80, 120,160, and 240 a.h.

This is not the whole article but a pointer to the original article.

Still searching more info on this, will keep this forum updated on progress

David

Edit> went chasing that article, found nothing....loops back to start here
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

tecnodave

#11
WB,

I just researched SAFT and made a discovery there......SAFT America is located in North Carolina.....the tag on these batteries has the address Greenville, North Carolina.....
The mystery deepens...Are these EDISONS or NIFE ?

David

Edit:  only the plastic cell connecting strap covers have the word "EDISON" on them. Every other marking is NIFE.     The mystery deepens...
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

tecnodave

WB,

You nailed it right on the head....These are NIFE batteries.....I googled SAFT and found a maintaince pamphlet listing "ED-80" batteries and perfect fit for what I have. The top strap covers could have been changed.  Apparently both Edison and NIFE were competing for the railroad business with the same form factor and model number for their batteries.

I will be recovering these for use.  According to SAFT the date code is stamped into the top of the battery......its there      0490.   Decoded as 04/90 so these batteries are not so old!

Thanks for that pointer to SAFT.   I still find nothing on NIFE battery co.  I have cleaned the outer cases and am searching for sources of KOH and Lioh to prepare solution.

Mike90054,  thanks much, I visited your "battery inverter" posting on Facebook. Yes I can see why you said it's a mig mess to clean and replaces electrolyte.

David
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P

Westbranch

One trick I got from the SAFT outlet in Alberta (at that time?) was to BOOST the cells and really get them mixed up (boiling) was to get a constant current charge at ~40 Amps .., as I only had a 30A  12V one he said to split each set of 10  (12V)  into 2 parallel 6V and do a 5 step charge observation...  should be in the maintenance Manual.....  1, 2, 3, 4, 4.5  and 5 HR.
Let me know and I will did through my old CPU for it...
KID FW1811 560W >C&D 24V 900Ah AGM
CL150 29032 FW V.2126-NW2097-GP2133 175A E-Panel WBjr, 3Px4s 140W > 24V 900Ah AGM,
2 Cisco WRT54GL i/c DD-WRT Rtr, NetGr DS104Hub
Cotek ST1500 Inv  want a 24V  ROSIE Inverter
OmniCharge3024  Eu1/2/3000iGens
West Chilcotin 1680+W to come

tecnodave

WB,

These batteries are pretty dead at .7 volts and .8 volts for the 5 cell group. From what I gathered so far the best next step is to drain the electrolyte, and install new electrolyte. I have read every post on this here and at NAWS forum, BB at NAWS pointed me to a discussion at solarpaneltalk forum and I got very good info over there. It seems that one of the persons at Iron Edison has expereince with these and has original documentation on these and NIFE battery company.

The electrolyte is clear with no float oil on top. In some of the NIFE documentation there is mention of float oil use in certain lines of NIFE Ni-Cad batteries. It seems that NIFE bought the Ni-Cad production and patent rights from EDISON battery to eliminate completion and open new lines of manufacture of these cells. NIFE then manufactured Ni-Cad batteries for EDISON battery company. That explains why both names appear on these batteries.  After Edison sold the patent rights of the Ni-Cad battery to NIFE battery company they continued production of the Ni-Fe battery until they sold the company to Exide.

Thanks for all the help

David
#1 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24volt L-16 Rolls-Surette S-530, MS4024 & Cotek ,  C-40 dirv.cont. for hot water
#2 Classic 150 12 x Sharp NE-170, 2S6P, 24 volt L-16 Interstate,Brutus Inv.
#3 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 4/6 P
#4 Kid/WBjr 4/6 Sanyo 200 watt multilayer 2S 2/3 P