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Battery Replacements After The Apocalypse


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#1 Collin

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 05:51 AM

Excuse my thread title. I know you can order an extra battery or three from Open Pandora, but I was wondering if there was some sort of generic battery one could buy that would work as a replacement battery, or if the battery is custom made. Pertaining to the thread title, let's say we're all living in a post-apocalyptic world, Open Pandora Ltd. long gone, and all those with access to those batteries otherwise incapacitated. Would one then have any chance of, wandering around in this hypothetical barren wasteland of a brave new world, coming upon a shady shack full of elusive electronics, and among the discarded treasures, find a battery that would power your now twenty year old handheld? Granted you'd be spending quite the chunk of bottle caps on your little purchase from an, in all probability, extremely shady and on occasion cannibalistic vendor, but ignoring that hypothetical...

Is there any sort of generic battery that Open Pandora stamped there logo on, or is it a custom rectangle of portable power?

#2 Consequence_9

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 06:17 AM

it's custom, and silliness aside i wouldn't screw around with batteries (trying to get one to work with something it's not rated for), the results can be... explosive. So order up! [while you can] ;]

#3 Gruso

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 06:33 AM

In the event of an apocalypse I'd probably be a little less fussy about how neat/compact it is. An external 5V battery connected to the DC inlet would be pretty easy to arrange.

#4 fischju2000

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 06:43 AM

I don't think the Pandora can run without a battery, even given DC input, can it?

#5 Vitel

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 07:01 AM

I don't think the Pandora can run without a battery, even given DC input, can it?

http://pandorawiki.o...ry_connected.3F

#6 Collin

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 12:17 PM

Well I certainly appreciate the response! Hopefully if they're still going strong in a couple of years, or at least maybe they have a couple lying around, I'll order another battery and stick it in my fridge. Thank you.

#7 strider_mt2k

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 02:51 PM

I think learning about electrical power systems will allow you to adapt what have you to what have you given the resources and the time.

Not to mention the radical shift in your priorities that will leave you forgetting about playing video games for more important tasks, like survival.

Good luck with that, either way.

#8 Vlynndar

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 03:26 PM

I think learning about electrical power systems will allow you to adapt what have you to what have you given the resources and the time.

Not to mention the radical shift in your priorities that will leave you forgetting about playing video games for more important tasks, like survival.

Good luck with that, either way.


Oh, you can just use the Pandora to look up some tutorials and walkthroughs online.
:P

#9 mindlord

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 04:17 PM

My post-apocolyptic survival scenario includes a Pandora with Wikipedia, and various survival handbook PDFs on a SD card.

#10 strider_mt2k

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 04:42 PM

So much for my plan to use it as a weight for my weighted club for fending off the horde. :(

#11 zounder1

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 04:51 PM

Well I certainly appreciate the response! Hopefully if they're still going strong in a couple of years, or at least maybe they have a couple lying around, I'll order another battery and stick it in my fridge. Thank you.


Just don't leave it fully charged or it will deteriorate just like the one being used day to day. A LiIon battery being put away for storage should ideally be at most 50% fully charged to ensure the battery does not chemically self destruct. A fully charged LiIon battery will start to chemically self-destruct when fully charged even if you do not use it.

#12 Collin

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Posted 01 February 2010 - 06:38 PM


Well I certainly appreciate the response! Hopefully if they're still going strong in a couple of years, or at least maybe they have a couple lying around, I'll order another battery and stick it in my fridge. Thank you.


Just don't leave it fully charged or it will deteriorate just like the one being used day to day. A LiIon battery being put away for storage should ideally be at most 50% fully charged to ensure the battery does not chemically self destruct. A fully charged LiIon battery will start to chemically self-destruct when fully charged even if you do not use it.


Aye aye! Thank you for the tip. :) And humorous responses from the rest. :P

#13 pelrun

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Posted 02 February 2010 - 02:02 AM

They'll deteriorate anyway. You can't avoid it, you can only pick the conditions where it is slowed down.

OP's been around for a couple of years without actually releasing the Pandora; I bloody well expect them to be around for at least a few years afterwards. In any case, as long as craigix doesn't fall off any particularly high roofs, we can always track him down and shake him until a few more batteries fall out.

#14 Laurencevde

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Posted 02 February 2010 - 02:29 AM

If I'm not entirely mistaken, the battery-pack contains multiple, fairly standard, LiPo-cells, and a charging/protection/info-circuit. If you manage to find compatible cells somewhere, or "redesign" the charging-circuit based around the cells you can get, then yes, you could replace them with a DIY. I believe the needed documentation for doing so(interface between pandora and battery) will be publicly available. Any aftermarket-battery-company should be able to build one.
Furthermore, hooking up an external battery-pack through USB will also work.

#15 Collin

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Posted 02 February 2010 - 02:53 AM

Even more extremely useful information. And even with all this, as I understand it, the Pandora *should* be able to run on AC power alone, without a battery pack in it. So if one of us really, really wants to use our Pandora twenty years from now, we could still plug it in. Portability's trashed though.