Circuit
This is a DIY design I got from an elderly Radio Control enthusiast that had an electrical engineering degree. It is for charging, trickle charging NiCd and NiMh batteries at C-10 current rates. It is based on a 2N3055 transistor. It uses a simple filament transformer to bring down the AC to 25 volts, a full wave rectifier, one electrolytic (100 MF). The B plus (25 volts rectified) is fed to a 10,000 ohm resistor that connects to the base of the transistor. The LED is fed by the same resistor and goes to ground. I am sure it is there to provide a light indicating the circuit is active. The emitter is connect to a 25 ohm pot with wiper connected to the ground side of the pot. The positive out put has a rectifier in line to prevent battery back flow . In my set up I put in a jumper to insert Ammeter terminals to set the current flow with the pot. I use banana plugs to out put the voltage (color coded red positive, black ground). Once I have the current set, I insert the jumper, and hook up my battery.
The circuit allows the voltage to float and regulate the current flow. Thus one can charge one cell to 30 cells in series. It does not matter if the battery is four cells or five cells or eight cells. One then charges for a period of time, say 8 to 12 hours at C-10 values of the battery/cell. Worked fine and then quit.
I misplaced the schematic and have redrawn it from the actual circuit. However, since the LED is soldered in place, the leads have been clipped and I can not tell the polarity of the LED. The other rectifier in the charge line is easily identified by its band.
It is simple and it worked fine. Then crapped out. Could be the transistor, LED, transfomer (I checked it, and it is okay). The transistor is T0-3 case and is mounted on to the aluminum box, so has plenty of heat sink. The LED is also mounted in a thru hole in the case as is the switch and jacks and power cord inlet (with protective grommet)
And I need the schematic for record purposes anyway so need the polarity direction of the LED.