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Canon BP-511 battery: specifications?
Does anyone know what the specifications are for the Canon BP-511
battery that's used in the EOS 300D (Rebel) and - I believe - in some others? I know the voltage but what about the current requirements? And what are the "B" and "D" contacts on the case for? There's no voltage across them but there is between "B" and the "+" terminal: but about 0.6v less than the main voltage, which sounds like a diode drop. The Canon AC Adapter is £50 in the UK, and I'm wondering if buying a dead cheap BP-511 from eBay and using it as the in-camera end of a home-made adapter, with a decent stabilised power supply, would be a cheaper option. I Googled for anyone doing the same without any hits. -- Henry Law Manchester, England |
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On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 13:12:30 +0000, Henry Law
wrote: Does anyone know what the specifications are for the Canon BP-511 battery that's used in the EOS 300D (Rebel) and - I believe - in some others? I know the voltage but what about the current requirements? And what are the "B" and "D" contacts on the case for? There's no voltage across them but there is between "B" and the "+" terminal: but about 0.6v less than the main voltage, which sounds like a diode drop. The Canon AC Adapter is £50 in the UK, and I'm wondering if buying a dead cheap BP-511 from eBay and using it as the in-camera end of a home-made adapter, with a decent stabilised power supply, would be a cheaper option. I Googled for anyone doing the same without any hits. ---------------------------------------- B = 97k - 101k ohm D = 73.5k - 76.5k ohm B is essentially useless and more likely a legacy connector. D is probably a thermistor based on its values The rest of the details on the BP-511 battery: 7.4vdc @ 1100mah I currently own an OEM BP-511 and a import (ebay) BP-511 rated at 1500mah. Even though the 3rd party BP-511 is rated at 7.2vdc, it works fine and the .2 vold difference is within the OEM voltage high/low spec. |
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On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 10:44:20 -0500, bin-slash
wrote: B = 97k - 101k ohm D = 73.5k - 76.5k ohm Thanks, but I don't understand: these resistance measurements are between the named terminal and where? B is essentially useless and more likely a legacy connector. Interesting; I know that this format of battery is in pretty wide use for digicams and such. Maybe they use it for something. D is probably a thermistor based on its values Used for what, would you say? Is it maybe associated with the flashing lights on the charger? Or maybe an over-temperature cutout? The rest of the details on the BP-511 battery: 7.4vdc @ 1100mah Mmmm, yes. But that could be 1.1A for an hour or 1.1mA for 1000 hours. What I need is the maximum, though - I've read that it could be up to 1Amp when the flash is charging. I currently own an OEM BP-511 and a import (ebay) BP-511 rated at 1500mah. Even though the 3rd party BP-511 is rated at 7.2vdc, it works fine and the .2 vold difference is within the OEM voltage high/low spec. Good to know; I'm planning to buy a third-party battery: the Canon ones are UKP50! (USD90-ish these days) -- Henry Law Manchester, England |
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On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 17:04:19 +0000, Henry Law
wrote: I currently own an OEM BP-511 and a import (ebay) BP-511 rated at 1500mah. Even though the 3rd party BP-511 is rated at 7.2vdc, it works fine and the .2 vold difference is within the OEM voltage high/low spec. Good to know; I'm planning to buy a third-party battery: the Canon ones are UKP50! (USD90-ish these days) Try 7dayshop.co.uk, I've been using a couple of 3rd party batteries from there for the last 12-18 months with no noticably difference over the original Canon item. They're recently brought the price down even more to GBP 9.99 |
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On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 17:04:19 +0000, Henry Law
wrote: On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 10:44:20 -0500, bin-slash wrote: B = 97k - 101k ohm D = 73.5k - 76.5k ohm Thanks, but I don't understand: these resistance measurements are between the named terminal and where? Those were internal (schematic) ratings. B is essentially useless and more likely a legacy connector. Interesting; I know that this format of battery is in pretty wide use for digicams and such. Maybe they use it for something. More likely the situation. It gives manufacturers the option for future designs additions without having to "re-invent-the-wheel" D is probably a thermistor based on its values Used for what, would you say? Is it maybe associated with the flashing lights on the charger? Or maybe an over-temperature cutout? Could be all the above and more. The rest of the details on the BP-511 battery: 7.4vdc @ 1100mah Mmmm, yes. But that could be 1.1A for an hour or 1.1mA for 1000 hours. What I need is the maximum, though - I've read that it could be up to 1Amp when the flash is charging. As you know, battery life is related its given load. The load on the battery can easily be measured with a ammeter across its negative lead. If I had to make an educated guess, I would say max load is at shutter lift then tapers off from there (unless internal flash is used). Even still, I can't see peak (spike) load going over 0.6amp. The natural impedence (high) of this battery will easily absorb any and all spikes. Good to know; I'm planning to buy a third-party battery: the Canon ones are UKP50! (USD90-ish these days) The only thing you don't want to do is, if you use a battery grip (that uses 2 or more batteries), DO NOT mix batteries. Not even old OEM's with newer OEM...Certainly not from different companies. A weaker or older battery will always pull down the better battery!! -Just another bloke born & from the U.S.A ;-) |
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bin-slash wrote in
: The only thing you don't want to do is, if you use a battery grip (that uses 2 or more batteries), DO NOT mix batteries. Not even old OEM's with newer OEM...Certainly not from different companies. A weaker or older battery will always pull down the better battery!! So where did you get this information from? Which battery grip is this information specific to? I have the 10D with BG-ED3, I have read that it draws current from one battery or the other, whichever has the higher voltage (IIRC). I certainly have had no problems in using 2 OEM batteries together which are different ages. Of course my 2 Power 2000 1500mAh batteries run longer as you would expect. I am not so sure that any of Canon's battery grips use a straight parallel connection between the 2 batteries to double the capacity. -- Mark Heyes (New Zealand) See my pics at www.gigatech.co.nz (last updated 12-Nov-04) "There are 10 types of people, those that understand binary and those that don't" |
#7
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"bin-slash" a écrit dans le message de ... On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 13:12:30 +0000, Henry Law wrote: Does anyone know what the specifications are for the Canon BP-511 battery that's used in the EOS 300D (Rebel) and - I believe - in some others? I know the voltage but what about the current requirements? And what are the "B" and "D" contacts on the case for? There's no voltage across them but there is between "B" and the "+" terminal: but about 0.6v less than the main voltage, which sounds like a diode drop. The Canon AC Adapter is £50 in the UK, and I'm wondering if buying a dead cheap BP-511 from eBay and using it as the in-camera end of a home-made adapter, with a decent stabilised power supply, would be a cheaper option. I Googled for anyone doing the same without any hits. ---------------------------------------- B = 97k - 101k ohm D = 73.5k - 76.5k ohm B is essentially useless and more likely a legacy connector. D is probably a thermistor based on its values The batteries are somewhat more complex than that, there are a couple of ICs and misc parts on a small circuit board. I had one go bad when it was dunked in water. The battery being charged made a mess of the circuits and even popped the plastic case open, that is how I peeked inside. Jean |
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Lionel choreographed a chorus line of high-kicking electrons
to spell out: Kibo informs me that Henry Law stated that: The Canon AC Adapter is £50 in the UK, and I'm wondering if buying a dead cheap BP-511 from eBay and using it as the in-camera end of a home-made adapter, with a decent stabilised power supply, would be a cheaper option. I Googled for anyone doing the same without any hits. A generic 7.2V supply & a dead, gutted BP-511 would probably be a cheap & effective option. I doubt very much that the camera uses anything but the + & - terminals. (I've got a couple of dead BP-511 clones, so I've considered making one of these adapters for my 10D, but I haven't got any pressing need for one, so I haven't bothered yet.) For reference, my EOS AC adapter here has just the +, -, and D terminals only... though my plan would have been to use the dummy battery as a pass-through for a body-mounted battery pack--better for cold days. -- __ A L L D O N E! B Y E B Y E! (__ * _ _ _ _ __)|| | |(_)| \ "...and then, the squirrels attacked." |
#9
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"MarkH" wrote in message
... bin-slash wrote in : The only thing you don't want to do is, if you use a battery grip (that uses 2 or more batteries), DO NOT mix batteries. Not even old OEM's with newer OEM...Certainly not from different companies. A weaker or older battery will always pull down the better battery!! So where did you get this information from? Which battery grip is this information specific to? I have the 10D with BG-ED3, I have read that it draws current from one battery or the other, whichever has the higher voltage (IIRC). I certainly have had no problems in using 2 OEM batteries together which are different ages. Of course my 2 Power 2000 1500mAh batteries run longer as you would expect. I am not so sure that any of Canon's battery grips use a straight parallel connection between the 2 batteries to double the capacity. -- Mark Heyes (New Zealand) See my pics at www.gigatech.co.nz (last updated 12-Nov-04) "There are 10 types of people, those that understand binary and those that don't" I certainly haven't had any problems using my BG-E2/20D with a BP-511 and BP-511A combination. -- Skip Middleton http://www.shadowcatcherimagery.com |
#10
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On Mon, 03 Jan 2005 23:06:13 GMT, MarkH wrote:
bin-slash wrote in : The only thing you don't want to do is, if you use a battery grip (that uses 2 or more batteries), DO NOT mix batteries. Not even old OEM's with newer OEM...Certainly not from different companies. A weaker or older battery will always pull down the better battery!! So where did you get this information from? Which battery grip is this information specific to? I have the 10D with BG-ED3, I have read that it draws current from one battery or the other, whichever has the higher voltage (IIRC). I certainly have had no problems in using 2 OEM batteries together which are different ages. Of course my 2 Power 2000 1500mAh batteries run longer as you would expect. I am not so sure that any of Canon's battery grips use a straight parallel connection between the 2 batteries to double the capacity. I never said they will not work. I'm speaking from an ideal standpoint. Just because 2 different batteries work doesn't mean its at their potential. Batteries are essentially capacitors with its given impedence (high). If the 2 batteries are from same source....different age...but both are equally healthy...the 2 batteries will work at or near their efficiency ( 90%). None of this is battery grip specific. Its battery specific These battery grips are wired in parallel so the output voltage remain constant dc (7.4). I seriously doubt that any of the "grips" alternate its power from one battery to another. Doing it this way is far less efficient than having them in parallel so both contribute to the vdc output. |
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