Not sure if in right forum.
Hey guys, i was doing some testing on a home made mod, and I was literally just testing connections to the atty from a battery. Like actually just electrical taped pos and neg to the battery and then touched the battery connector so i knew where it needed to be soldered. Well then i installed a switch and did not do it right (i'm a computer guy, not a wiring/electrical guy) I ended up setting up the switch the wrong way, and I was completing the circuit wrong and I used the wrong switch (i used a normally open switch instead of normall closed)...so the LED would stay on and then I would hit the switch and the LED would go off. While i was holding the button to keep the LED off, the battery went to about 200 degrees and I had to drop it because it was so hot. Ever since then I am not able to charge the battery. Did i do a complete drain on that and damage the cells because I did not wire the switch right? I've tried putting them in the charger but the light stays green and does no go to red, and I tested voltage, i'm getting maybe 1v out of the normal 3.7. I hear the atty going but it's at 1v instead of 3v. Did I completely damage these batteries by doing this?
It's not about ordering new ones, thats no problem, but its about learning what i did wrong and how I actually depleted the battery in seconds and damaged the cells to the point that they can't recharge. When i held that switch to shut off the LED, it was wired wrong so i was actually completing the full circuit and I had both the switch positive and negative going to battery and atomizer positve and negative going to the battery, that is a big no no...that i have now learned
Any idea if these batteries are shot? When i say hot to touch i mean literally had to drop them because of how hot they god at the negative end.
Hey guys, i was doing some testing on a home made mod, and I was literally just testing connections to the atty from a battery. Like actually just electrical taped pos and neg to the battery and then touched the battery connector so i knew where it needed to be soldered. Well then i installed a switch and did not do it right (i'm a computer guy, not a wiring/electrical guy) I ended up setting up the switch the wrong way, and I was completing the circuit wrong and I used the wrong switch (i used a normally open switch instead of normall closed)...so the LED would stay on and then I would hit the switch and the LED would go off. While i was holding the button to keep the LED off, the battery went to about 200 degrees and I had to drop it because it was so hot. Ever since then I am not able to charge the battery. Did i do a complete drain on that and damage the cells because I did not wire the switch right? I've tried putting them in the charger but the light stays green and does no go to red, and I tested voltage, i'm getting maybe 1v out of the normal 3.7. I hear the atty going but it's at 1v instead of 3v. Did I completely damage these batteries by doing this?
It's not about ordering new ones, thats no problem, but its about learning what i did wrong and how I actually depleted the battery in seconds and damaged the cells to the point that they can't recharge. When i held that switch to shut off the LED, it was wired wrong so i was actually completing the full circuit and I had both the switch positive and negative going to battery and atomizer positve and negative going to the battery, that is a big no no...that i have now learned
Any idea if these batteries are shot? When i say hot to touch i mean literally had to drop them because of how hot they god at the negative end.