I attempted to build the mod shown here:
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...5-vamo-pcb-nimh-batteries-2.html#post10287866
My attempt used a v3 PCB.
There's no startup LED flash on the v3, so current draw is lower and it's not so easy to fool it into thinking it's on a single lithium cell with a dropper resistor. I use a LD1117 3.3V regulator instead, and then jumper it out of the circuit once it's ready. It sees the full 5.4V of the freshly charged cells, but there must be an additional high voltage check because it errors with "HHHHHHHH" on screen when I try to fire.
I can't leave the regulator in because it's only rated for 0.8A. I tried it anyway and it errored with "Short" on a 2.2ohm coil.
It works fine with 3xNiMH cells, but that's annoying because the 3.2V cutoff will mean I can't fully discharge them and I prefer using even numbers of cells where possible. The ideal solution would be to hack the firmware somehow to set custom high/low voltage cutoffs.
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...5-vamo-pcb-nimh-batteries-2.html#post10287866
My attempt used a v3 PCB.
There's no startup LED flash on the v3, so current draw is lower and it's not so easy to fool it into thinking it's on a single lithium cell with a dropper resistor. I use a LD1117 3.3V regulator instead, and then jumper it out of the circuit once it's ready. It sees the full 5.4V of the freshly charged cells, but there must be an additional high voltage check because it errors with "HHHHHHHH" on screen when I try to fire.
I can't leave the regulator in because it's only rated for 0.8A. I tried it anyway and it errored with "Short" on a 2.2ohm coil.
It works fine with 3xNiMH cells, but that's annoying because the 3.2V cutoff will mean I can't fully discharge them and I prefer using even numbers of cells where possible. The ideal solution would be to hack the firmware somehow to set custom high/low voltage cutoffs.