Vamo 5 Low V

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BJ43

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My 10 day old Vamo5 started giving Low V even with fully charged battery. If I hit it in my palm it makes contact and works a few minutes. I have repaired the neg screw problem on my 3 Vamo 2s. Thought this problem would have been fixed on the Vamo 5. Has anyone opened one of these up? Are they the same neg screw set up? Looks like a PITA to open.:mad:
 

BJ43

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Are you using flat top or button top?

Have you tried stretching your end cap spring? Cleaning the contact on the control head?

Do you have a voltmeter other than the one in the Vamo?

Have an engineering degree, voltmeter, oscilloscope, ECD meter, flattop, button top, cleaned all contacts, stretched spring. It turns on, after a couple of draws the low V comes on. Same as the O2 error on the V2 when the ground screw was loose except the V5 is a little harder to open up than the V2.
 

Trayce

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Thanks, did it. Still have not figured out what is wrong..

I've read it mentioned in another forum (forget now which version of the Vamo they were working on) that a blob of solder was hiding the screw that the ground wire was attached to, and they had to remove the solder to see the screw was loose. I read your post and see you have addressed that issue in other versions, but I would not count on any problems being fixed is subsequent Vamo versions, as they are made by different manuf from what I understand, and are still hand-assembled.

So you could remove that blob of solder to check the ground. If that isn't the problem I'd reassemble it and return it to the Vendor since it's only 10 days old.

Could be my imagination but seems like the V5s are having more problems than the V2s/V3s. I love my SS V3, swirls and all. If I ordered another Vamo today it would be another V3.

EDIT: If it isn't the ground then maybe the pin isn't installed on the PCB in the right position so that when it is assembled, it doesn't protrude enough into the Vamo's batt case to make solid contact, even if the batt is pushing all the way up (from a stretched spring). Did you happen to eyeball that before taking it apart?? Maybe the PCB was just 'seated too high" in the top? Because if it was a bad chip it wouldn't work initially, then give LowV, then work again when slapped in the hand. That's def a contact or ground problem, and there's only a couple places you could be going wrong there... :)
 
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BJ43

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I've read it mentioned in another forum (forget now which version of the Vamo they were working on) that a blob of solder was hiding the screw that the ground wire was attached to, and they had to remove the solder to see the screw was loose. I read your post and see you have addressed that issue in other versions, but I would not count on any problems being fixed is subsequent Vamo versions, as they are made by different manuf from what I understand, and are still hand-assembled.

So you could remove that blob of solder to check the ground. If that isn't the problem I'd reassemble it and return it to the Vendor since it's only 10 days old.

Could be my imagination but seems like the V5s are having more problems than the V2s/V3s. I love my SS V3, swirls and all. If I ordered another Vamo today it would be another V3.

It isn't that. I have done that repair on two of my V2s.. And yes they seem to be having problems, they are actually even cheaper than the V2s at FT.
 

BJ43

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Check the solder joint on the connector that touches the top of the battery, could be a crappy solder job and causing a high open

Sux...Vamo internals are usually pretty stout

What kind of batteries are you using?

Already answered the battery question. tried many, single and stacked. it has nothing to do with batteries. Powered the board out of the unit using a lipo and alligator clips. Seems to be some problem with the small left micro switch. Will ck for cold solder.
 
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