Incase anyone is interested in cross-checking their batteries s/n associated with my melted one, here it is.
Thats probably a good thing, I guess the question I see is, if they detect a trend, how many batteries does it affect, how many in a production batch, assuming of course, that its not some odd design issue, considering how long they've been creating batteries for their products. And can they easily contact customers that may have potentially problematic batteries, not all in a batch could be flawed..
Ingobrecrived today indicates it was a charging hub issue that somehow affected the battery. No more detsilsbptovided thanbthat.Thats probably a good thing, I guess the question I see is, if they detect a trend, how many batteries does it affect, how many in a production batch, assuming of course, that its not some odd design issue, considering how long they've been creating batteries for their products. And can they easily contact customers that may have potentially problematic batteries, not all in a batch could be flawed..
In my case. Deviations were zero. Voltage and amp traces were unremarkable. System showed 40% battery left on landing.If any of you folks with blown batteries have an Airdata UAV account, it would be interesting to see the battery cell deviation report for the subject flight. Here is what the report looks like and captures one of my newer MA2 batteries with 3 total charges. You'll note that this particular battery is already showing deviations in cell number 3, which according to the legend below the chart, warrants watching. Would be interesting to see your data and what cell had the problem and maybe if there were warning signs in the overall trend. My other 3 MA2 batteries are very similar regarding cell #3 deviation rates in excess of 50 per minute.
View attachment 109261
Understood, so in your case there were no warning signs in the data that would have raised concern prior to flight. Unfortunately with all 4 of my MA2 batteries I'm showing higher deviations that don't exist in the batteries for any of my other drones. This raises my eyebrows somewhat, given the damage others are seeing. Hopefully more folks will be able to report their trends. I may ground my MA2 until this is sorted out by DJI.In my case. Deviations were zero. Voltage and amp traces were unremarkable. System showed 40% battery left on landing.
I had expected to see a cell go bad....but it was, as I said, unremarkable. If I showed you the plots of my good battery and the bad flight.... the only fifferencecwas the battery temp profile.
The usual cause for a meltdown like this is an internal short within the individual battery cell.
So what is the root cause of the MOSFET damage? Is it incorrect installation on the board or defects in design or manufacturing the chip itself?Absolutely wrong.
If battery has cells issue like short circuit it would cause drone crash as it could not supply enough power for the motors. Followed by turning off the battery itself by protection mechanism.
Noone with melted batteries has reported the crash.
But everyone has reported that batteries could not be switched Off.
Also in case of cell short circuit it should be the cells compartment to be melted but it's not the case.
Instead there is BMS compartment which is damaged.
So lets look inside Mavic Air 2 battery to determine the root cause while DJI silently replacing affected ones.
View attachment 109259
The melted hole located exactly against Charge and Discharge transistors which are NTMFS4C02N 230A rated n-Channel MOSFETs in SO-8 enclosure produced by ON Semiconductors.
View attachment 109262
If any of them is damaged then it starts overheating due to increased internal resistance while flowing significant current through them.
At this scenario damaged MOSFET could not be controlled by bms uC so battery output is always under power and drone could not be switched off (exactly like reported).
The same issue was once observed on M2P battery in my practice. The customer noticed the drone is powered on as soon as battery is inserted in the comapartment without double-pressing the button and battery begun to heat. He promptly reported to our service so it still was not melted. Diagnostics revealed damaged both MOSFETs. After their replacement the battery starts work just fine.
I justed checked my good batteries' history files. 1 battery is showing a 0.2 v deviation on the number 3 cell. And a check of all files for all batteries shows if I have deviations, they are on cell 3. All fall into minor rating. I have no recorded major deviations of volts or maps.Understood, so in your case there were no warning signs in the data that would have raised concern prior to flight. Unfortunately with all 4 of my MA2 batteries I'm showing higher deviations that don't exist in the batteries for any of my other drones. This raises my eyebrows somewhat, given the damage others are seeing. Hopefully more folks will be able to report their trends. I may ground my MA2 until this is sorted out by DJI.
Strange that so far it is only on cell #3. I have Mavic 2 Zoom batteries with 20 charges with no unusual deviations. Along with what 'everBit' posted about the potential MOSFET damage, it has me somewhat concerned...for all of us.I justed checked my good batteries' history files. 1 battery is showing a 0.2 v deviation on the number 3 cell. And a check of all files for all batteries shows if I have deviations, they are on cell 3. All fall into minor rating. I have no recorded major deviations of volts or maps.
So what is the root cause of the MOSFET damage? Is it incorrect installation on the board or defects in design or manufacturing the chip itself?
Thanks for the explanation. Would there be any warning signs prior to failure other than what you explained regarding a battery that was already initialized during installation?My guess is manufacturing defect of MOSFETs used, probably the defected batch.
For many battery families DJI has used 1C530L 100A rated MOSFET which were paralleled in P3 and P4 ones to increase current throughput. This part has proved its reliability by time.
But now we see different type MOSFETs. Yes, they 230A rated against 100A but probably manufacturing technology still not perfect.
Would there be any warning signs prior to failure other than what you explained regarding a battery that was already initialized during installation?
I ran across this thread the other day and didn't think much of it at the time
If I showed you the plots of my good battery and the bad flight.... the only fifferencecwas the battery temp profile.
the suggestion to remove the battery after flight, leaving the drone empty, is that a good standard practice, or is it overkill?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.