The charging circuitry is inside the box. It appears to have a voltage regulator and such. The battery in my box only appears to ever reach a top voltage of 12.41 using the only working charger I have which is for the bumpboxx. Since the voltage of the bumpboxx charger is only 15V instead of the required 18V of the non working charger, I can only assume the circuitry is not fully charging the battery as a result, the battery is defective or both.jimmyjimmy19702010 said:Is there circuitry between the charging input jack and the SLA battery? In other words, is the brains of the charging operation in the charger itself or inside the box?
Great job Eric, and yes the new battery leaves zero wiggle room. Nice and snug. I used Melvins idea of some good velcro tape to secure the battery. The upgrade made a HUGE difference. It just wont die Lol, well worth the investment.caution said:Here's some pics from my battery upgrade. I used double-stick foam tape to attach it.
It filled up the entire space with no room to spare! Love it!
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Sorry you had issues with yours, the battery upgrade is a good move, I think you'll be pleased if you swap it out. The stock battery dies pretty fast.Transistorized said:The charging circuitry is inside the box. It appears to have a voltage regulator and such. The battery in my box only appears to ever reach a top voltage of 12.41 using the only working charger I have which is for the bumpboxx. Since the voltage of the bumpboxx charger is only 15V instead of the required 18V of the non working charger, I can only assume the circuitry is not fully charging the battery as a result, the battery is defective or both.
I can always get a 18V charger locally around here but most of them are higher Amperage. I know this is okay when powering a device however, I am not sure about charging systems. Most laptop power supplies are 18V but are 3.5Amps and up. I am worried about damaging my unit.
I'll wait a day or so to hear back from them. They really just need to get me one that does as advertised. It says it will play for 5 hrs. Mine doesn't. It plays for 30 minutes and does not charge. It is defective.
**EDIT**
Ok I Really want this to work without having to deal with the hassle of returning it and being without for another 2 weeks. So far I have not heard back from rock & Soul since yesterday. No biggie. I'm sure they have other things to do and are probably waiting on the manufacturer to instruct them.
Anyway, after going to a few electronic specialists around my area they all tell me the same thing. As long as your voltage is correct, you can go with a higher Amperage power adaptor. Looking at the actual box one technician told me that the higher amperage power supply may make the voltage regulator run a little hotter but he felt the heat sink seemed more than adequate.
So I said what the heck. Purchased a universal power brick with a voltage selector. Set the voltage to 18V (which actually reads 18.23 at the tip with my volt meter). This power brick is capable of supplying 3.5A peak at 18V. The box only needs/requires 2.6
I've kept things open to monitor the status. So far everything is nice and cool. Battery voltage started at 12.11 prior to charging. It's been about 20 minutes now and it is now higher than it ever got with my 15V power supply. It is now at 12.45. That's looking promising. I'll keep y'all posted.
I also went ahead and purchased the Duracell 12V 5ah battery just in case this battery is a dud. Fingers crossed. I'll be happy if the original battery plays at lest 4 hours at 40% for a while. Just to know the box and charger combo is working. After that if I want more time I'll throw in the Duracell.
We'll see. I'll follow back up with you guys on the progress or lack thereof.
Thanks SLO. Not much later from your post I received an email. They are going to send me a replacement charger. Yay!SLO said:I hear you man, it kinda sucks to spend money on a brand new product, and then spend MORE to get it working the way it should in the 1st place. Im glad you went ahead and upgraded the batrery, I think you'll be happy with itHopefully Rock N Soul will get you a new charger soon too. The DJT is a good grab n go box that looks and sounds nice. Great portable size. Good luck with the charger bro.
Hey Jimmy. That raises a few good questions. When I first put my battery in my box it was (off the shelf) at 12.77V and it ran it with both green lights lit for an hour. After that the top light started to blink. Now its all the way off unless the volume is all the way down. With my 18V 3.5A power brick my box only tops off the battery at at 12.47. That's peak. At that voltage the top green light is pretty much off. I am going to use it until the lower green light goes off to see if it is charging the box at ALL. Time will tell. After all I got a box with a bad battery and a bad power supply. No reason to assume the charging circuit might not be faulty as well. The internal regulator shuts off the charge at 12.47 on mine. The only good thing is I'm guessing 12.47V might be at least 75% charged on this 5ah battery. If that's the case it should still run for at least 5 hours (I'd hope)jimmyjimmy19702010 said:Is use 7.2 aH SLA batteries in my DIY builds and always use the same automatic charger. The recommended charging amperage is 600mAH according to the charger manufacturer for this size battery. This charger brings the battery voltage up to 13.90 volts and maintains it at that voltage. Off the charger, the battery voltage settles down to around 13.10 volts - (what's considered a fully charged SLA battery (give or take).
There is obviously some reason why this box needs such a high 18volts to charge the battery.!? All I know is if the battery voltage doesn't get up to over 13 volts after charging, then the battery is not 100% full.
I'm not sure if any other DJ box owners have checked the final battery voltage after charging but if your replacement power supply (when it arrives) doesn't bring that battery voltage up to these numbers, then there may be an issue with the internal charging circuitry. (Hereby referring to the brick as a power supply and not a charger as the 'brains' of the charging process is contained inside the box).
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I plugged mine in to top off, I can check the voltage later for you once it stops blinking.Transistorized said:Can a few of you other DJT boom box purchasers check your batteries when the charge light goes solid and let us know what your final voltage is?
Trade YaReli said:I have two DJ Tech's from Rock & Soul, and they both last 4-5 hours easily.