Togomi Posted yesterday at 09:59 Posted yesterday at 09:59 Hi, Which is the minimum voltage to change the batteries in an active bass if it works at 18V? It's Fender Precision American Elite. I forgot to check them and yerterday I had to change to passive. I've checked batteries today and they have 10,42V. Too low. One IA says that it works well till 12-14V. I would like to check in order to avoid what happened yesterday. I've had to open back tap. Is there any way to check it without opening the back tap? Thanks in advance Quote
HeadlessBassist Posted yesterday at 10:13 Posted yesterday at 10:13 Usually you can tell when they're going, as your signal starts to aurally disappear through several frequencies. Some instruments emit a high pitched whine when the batteries are getting low, but not usually Fenders. How long have they been in the bass / how long on average is it plugged in? I usually habitually change the batteries in my active basses annually, and I never leave the cable plugged in when I'm not using the bass, as I don't want to get caught short on a professional engagement. Nine volt batteries usually stay at 9 for a very long time. I'd say that yes, 12-14V would be the minimum for an 18V preamp to run at maximum efficiency. Quote
Hellzero Posted yesterday at 18:57 Posted yesterday at 18:57 It all depends on the opamp used, some will still work with very low voltage... 1 Quote
Woodinblack Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago 9V batteries stay higher than 9v most of their life. if I was measuring a battery to see if it was good, and it was a normal PP3, If I measured it and it was below 9v I would throw it away. 2 Quote
Hellzero Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 9.6 to 9.8 Volts is the standard reading of a brand new quality (9 Volts) battery. Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago The problem is that at the end of their useful life 9V PP3 batteries tend to 'fall off a cliff' in higher current use. Hence the familiar rapid onset of fartiness halfway through a set. They usually show well above 9V off load even when fairly well discharged. What really matters is the on load voltage. A better quality battery e.g. a good alkaline one, will go to a lower on load voltage before it suddenly drops. The load varies between preamp designs. A preamp taking a smaller current will cause less voltage drop and therefore work with a weaker battery. They can also recover a bit when unused. So the voltage level a gig or two before the battery fails depends on the quality of the battery, the preamp current requirement and the frequency of use. This graph is at an unrealistic 100mA discharge rate. Much lower rates would be found in mist of our applications (except old school digital effects). The theoretical ideal would be to measure the voltage with the preamp on and keep records for each battery brand until you know when it's likely to fail. Thinking about it, a sensible compromise would be to use older batteries for practice/rehearsal and keep fresher ones for gigs. You could keep track of which batteries are freshest by measuring their voltage. I'll probably start doing this! P.S. I have an active Hohner with a red LED for power on. The LED probably uses more power than the preamp... Quote
Woodinblack Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 43 minutes ago, Stub Mandrel said: They can also recover a bit when unused. I have never known that, they seem to go down when unused for me 43 minutes ago, Stub Mandrel said: Thinking about it, a sensible compromise would be to use older batteries for practice/rehearsal and keep fresher ones for gigs. You could keep track of which batteries are freshest by measuring their voltage. Its not an economy I understand - I get a box of 10 batteries off ebay and if I ever measure anything less than 9V I throw the battery out (recycle obvs) and put a new one in, maybe environmentally not as good, but I would never put a known dying battery in a bass for a practice or any other reason, I do have a list of when I last changed them though, there are a few batteries that are several years old. 43 minutes ago, Stub Mandrel said: P.S. I have an active Hohner with a red LED for power on. The LED probably uses more power than the preamp... I have a hohner with a red LED for power on.. however, it has no power or circuit board! 1 Quote
Togomi Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago (edited) Thanks everybody. I've seen a video on youtube and one guy used a stero jack/TRS to check the batteries without opening the cover tap of the batteries. Does it work always or only with some basses? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kyUWE0JLpVU&t=307s Edited 9 hours ago by Togomi Quote
Hellzero Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago For those interested, there's this perfect device, called Keith McMillen Batt-o-Meter, which can test batteries inside an instrument or pedal, outside them and even self test itself, which means it was really well thought. Not very expensive and, to me, worth the price. You can get it for £24,4 GBP from Thomann (and others): https://www.thomann.co.uk/keith_mcmillen_batt_o_meter.htm Here is an old review: 1 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 7 hours ago, Woodinblack said: I have never known that, they seem to go down when unused for me Typically, the voltage of an alkkaline cell rebounds when taken off load quite fast, then it slows down over a longer period, so if you measure when they come out of the bass after a gig it may have gone up a bit by the next one. It doesn't really affect the capacity but can mean a battery you thought was flat can appear to work OK for a while. Obviously, over months/years they self-discharge which is a different effect. Quote
dudewheresmybass Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago precisely this 4 hours ago, Hellzero said: For those interested, there's this perfect device, called Keith McMillen Batt-o-Meter, which can test batteries inside an instrument or pedal, outside them and even self test itself, which means it was really well thought. Not very expensive and, to me, worth the price. You can get it for £24,4 GBP from Thomann (and others): https://www.thomann.co.uk/keith_mcmillen_batt_o_meter.htm Here is an old review: Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.