Make a Powerful Rechargable Flashlight Out of a Used Battery (earth Day Part II)
by Basement Engineering in Circuits > Mobile
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Make a Powerful Rechargable Flashlight Out of a Used Battery (earth Day Part II)
Old lithium ion batteries - many of us have them laying around. And in most cases there is little use for them. Well, until today. In my previous ible and video I showed you how to use them as a powerbank, today I will show you how to turn them into a useful flashlight that lights up your working environment. I also made a project video.
What You Will Need
To create your own helpful tool you will need...
• a used lithium ion battery
• a container that fits your battery and the other components
• some wire
• a lithium ion battery protection and charging board
• a circuit board
• a few female pins
• a small switch
• two 3 Ohm resistors
• 24 white SMD LED's (from an LED-strip)
as well as
• a piece of acrylic
To make your work more efficient some tools might be helpful. I recommend using...
• a hot glue gun
• a soldering ion
• a pair of pliers
• a wire cutter
and of course
• a cutting knife
Make the Battery Pins
Make the LED Panel
When you have all 24 chips, cut your circuit board to the right size and solder the LED's onto it. I will go with a grid of 5X5 LED's with one missing in the bottom row. They are going to be separated into two groups of 12 LED's in parallel. Each of the groups is connected to the power source through a 3 Ohm resistor.
It is a good idea to pre tin the soldering spots before applying the LED's. Carefully push them down while melting the tin underneath from the sides. As I did not have stripped circuit board for this project I used some garden wire to create negative and positive rails and connected the chip's to it.
When you are finished soldering test the panel using a bench power supply or a few AA batteries. When I first attached it to a power source only half of the LED's where working. It turned out that I had caused two short circuits while soldering and three of the LED's were not working at all (I should probably have tested them before). After I replaced the broken chips and repaired everything it finally worked.
Connect the Components and Fit Them Into the Container
I used an old nail container for the housing. Those things are awesome for small electronic projects, that's why I always keep them. Your container should fit your battery as well as the other components. Use a drill to make holes for the switch and the charging port.
When you think that you found a good way to arrange everything, hot glue the parts in place.
Create a Tight Battery Compartment
Insert the Battery and See It in Action
I hope this ible was as helpful to you as this little light is to me and that you found another purpose for your old lithium ion batteries. If you didn't already you might consider reading or watching my previous project and maybe you still want to see my current video.