Hi All,
Thought I would share my process as I work through this incase it is of interest to anyone else, basically I am working on a 12v charging solution for my Phantom 3 batteries capable of charging 3 batteries at a time in the field and I am finding some interesting things along the way
Basically I have scratched the idea of using an inverter...why? Mainly because of cost and complexity, a decent 300-400w inverter runs about $300AUD then you have to factor in extra 100W chargers which are $100AUD each.
My alternative is to use DC-DC boost converters to achieve what I set out for and I have had to do some research on the stock chargers characteristics / batteries and how best to duplicate it.
The results have been interesting to say the least, basically I charged a couple of Phantom batteries and logged the voltage rise and current draw over the whole period. The stock charger is rated at 100w and only has a single combined output. Connecting the RC to the charger at the same time drops the batteries charging rate to around 75W. Running just the battery on the charger I saw a maximum of around 94W.
Peak power draw seems to occur around the 10-20min mark and current draw drops off sharply by 30minutes (batteries were around 25-30% residual charge).
The no-load voltage for the Phantom 100W charger is 17.35V so I dialled in the DC-DC converter's no-load voltage accordingly and set the current supply to the lowest level and started charging the first battery. The Phantom batteries do not seem to incorporate any sort of charging control / current limiting and the batteries appear to take all they can get by the looks of it. I dialled up my test DC-DC power supply to 110W before chickening out and backing it down to 94W.
The theoretical maximum load for these DC-DC converters at 17.35V is 120W per unit. Originally I wanted to parallel the outputs to share the load however this won't be suitable if there is no current limiting in the batteries so I will most likely go with plan B and run 3 separate outputs to the terminal strip so each converter only has 1 battery to deal with.
I have attached the charging graph also if anyone finds it interesting and will post further updates as they come
Thought I would share my process as I work through this incase it is of interest to anyone else, basically I am working on a 12v charging solution for my Phantom 3 batteries capable of charging 3 batteries at a time in the field and I am finding some interesting things along the way

Basically I have scratched the idea of using an inverter...why? Mainly because of cost and complexity, a decent 300-400w inverter runs about $300AUD then you have to factor in extra 100W chargers which are $100AUD each.
My alternative is to use DC-DC boost converters to achieve what I set out for and I have had to do some research on the stock chargers characteristics / batteries and how best to duplicate it.
The results have been interesting to say the least, basically I charged a couple of Phantom batteries and logged the voltage rise and current draw over the whole period. The stock charger is rated at 100w and only has a single combined output. Connecting the RC to the charger at the same time drops the batteries charging rate to around 75W. Running just the battery on the charger I saw a maximum of around 94W.
Peak power draw seems to occur around the 10-20min mark and current draw drops off sharply by 30minutes (batteries were around 25-30% residual charge).
The no-load voltage for the Phantom 100W charger is 17.35V so I dialled in the DC-DC converter's no-load voltage accordingly and set the current supply to the lowest level and started charging the first battery. The Phantom batteries do not seem to incorporate any sort of charging control / current limiting and the batteries appear to take all they can get by the looks of it. I dialled up my test DC-DC power supply to 110W before chickening out and backing it down to 94W.
The theoretical maximum load for these DC-DC converters at 17.35V is 120W per unit. Originally I wanted to parallel the outputs to share the load however this won't be suitable if there is no current limiting in the batteries so I will most likely go with plan B and run 3 separate outputs to the terminal strip so each converter only has 1 battery to deal with.
I have attached the charging graph also if anyone finds it interesting and will post further updates as they come
