space engineers lcd panel battery brands
Script that shows the charge of all batteries on the connected grid with LCD images. You can safely add new batteries to the ship/station without having to recompile the script.
This script was specially written to use my "LCD Inverted Percentage Bars 1%" Mod, that adds 101 images to show how much charge is on all the battiers on the connected grid.
Its a cool script. Kinda feel like the LCD image lets it down. Me and a friend are making a machine where it has multiple batteries and turbines on it but cannot find a script to make it easier for us to observe the machines power use/drain/charge.
Hi, is there any way to rotate the display? The texture is quite narrow and it"d fit quite nicely on a vertically placed wide lcd panel but it"d need an option to rotate it within it.
Hey, is this still working after the most recent Survival-Update? I cant get my Textpanel (small LCD) to display anything. I named it "LCD Battery", loaded the script into a programmable block and hit run. Images mod ist also loaded. Nothing happens. I can manually load the images into the LCD; but they only display for s second before it goes back to "online" Any help?
Testing conducted by Apple in September 2021 using preproduction 16-inch MacBook Pro systems with Apple M1 Pro, 10-core CPU, 16-core GPU, 16GB of RAM, and 1TB SSD. The Apple TV app movie playback test measures battery life by playing back HD 1080p content with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. Battery life varies by use and configuration. See apple.com/batteries for more information.
Testing conducted by Apple in September 2021 using preproduction 14-inch MacBook Pro systems with Apple M1 Pro, 8-core CPU, 14-core GPU, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB SSD. The wireless web test measures battery life by wirelessly browsing 25 popular websites with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. The Apple TV app movie playback test measures battery life by playing back HD 1080p content with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. Battery life varies by use and configuration. See apple.com/batteries for more information.
Testing conducted by Apple in September 2021 using preproduction 16-inch MacBook Pro systems with Apple M1 Pro, 10-core CPU, 16-core GPU, 16GB of RAM, and 1TB SSD. The wireless web test measures battery life by wirelessly browsing 25 popular websites with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. The Apple TV app movie playback test measures battery life by playing back HD 1080p content with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. Battery life varies by use and configuration. See apple.com/batteries for more information.
Tesla has tried to charge a Model S owner $22,500 for a battery pack replacement out of warranty, but a third-party shop was able to fix the issue for a fraction of that cost.
It’s a hard question to answer since the vast majority of Tesla battery replacements have been done under warranty. Early on, Tesla offered eight-year unlimited mileage powertrain warranties for Model S and Model X.
With Model S production starting in 2012 and higher volumes not coming until 2014, only recently have those vehicles started to come off their powertrain warranty. We have seen quotes from Tesla for battery pack replacements between $20,000 and $30,000. That’s a lot of money, but the good news is that Tesla’s battery packs have been known to last a long time.
However, when the problem is not necessarily battery degradation and the battery pack simply fails, Tesla has been known to be quick to suggest a replacement rather than try to fix the battery pack.
That was the case of Tyler Hoover of Hoovie’s Garage after he bought a 2013 Model S P85. The electric vehicle, which was four months out of battery warranty, started to display a “maximum battery charge level reduced” error message and couldn’t be charged above 50 miles.
While Tesla recently started opening up some of its diagnostic tools to third parties, the automaker still has a lot of limitations when it comes to powertrain diagnostics. Electrified Garage uses some hacks to get past that and figure out what is wrong with the pack. In this case, they detected some voltage imbalances in 2 of the 16 battery modules:
“We were able to drop the battery and replace modules in the pack to fix the issue for about 75% off the quoted Tesla Service Center price. This is the importance of both Right to Repair, and having skilled technicians available at service centers to properly diagnose issues with solutions that are not wasteful, or overly extreme in cost. The sustainability aspect is most alarming, as we are coming up to most older Model S and X vehicles being out of warranty. “
I understand if Tesla doesn’t want to get involved in that kind of service repair. They want to replace the battery pack, send the old pack to its pack remanufacturing team, and refurbish it where it has the expertise to do so.
We are continually inspired by our incredible community – your creations, machinations, mods, stories, and visions of the world of Space Engineers drive us to excel. We would like to share a slice of creations that caught our eye during the past month.
This is the charger we’d buy. It has a fold-out plug—so it sits flush on your wall outlet—and notification lights over each battery slot. And it can charge up to four batteries at a time.
The four-slot Panasonic Eneloop BQ-CC55 is simple to use: You pop in the batteries—any brand of AA or AAA NiMH batteries will do—and then you flip open the AC plug, stick the charger in your wall outlet, and wait for the status lights to indicate that each battery is fully charged. An auto-shutoff feature automatically detects the batteries’ charge level and cuts off power after they’re done charging. The BQ-CC55 is made by a company we trust based on decades of customer experience, and it performed well in our battery-capacity and drain-time testing. It also has a neutral, unobtrusive look that will blend into the background of most rooms.
The EBL 6201 four-bay charger offers many of the same features as the Panasonic BQ-CC55: It charges up to four NiMH batteries at a time, cuts off power automatically once charging is complete, has notification lights above every battery slot, and is fairly small and compact. But rather than an AC plug, the EBL has USB input ports on the side; these allow you to charge your AA or AAA batteries using whichever combination of connector (a USB-C or Micro-USB cable) and power source (a laptop, wall charger, or power bank) you choose. So if you already have a USB wall charger in a spot where you’d like to charge batteries—by a bedside table or desk, for example—you can plug the EBL into that instead of taking up an entire outlet.
The Tenergy TN480U eight-bay charger is the best choice for people who regularly need to charge a lot of NiMH batteries at once. It has eight individually charging battery slots, and it charges AA, AAA, and AAAA batteries. The TN480U’s screen tells you which batteries are charging and how charged they are, on a scale of one to five. This charger is smaller and more compact than most eight-slot chargers we’ve tested, so it easily blends in with its surroundings. The screen is bright and simple to read when viewed up close, but from a distance it’s pleasantly subtle. The TN480U is powered via Micro-USB or USB-C, and it comes with a Micro-USB charging cable and rubber-band cable tie (though you’ll have to supply your own USB wall charger).
This four-slot charger measures battery capacity, voltage, internal resistance, and charge time. It can charge AA, AAA, AAAA, and C batteries, including lithium- and nickel-based batteries, all with custom charge rates.
The Tenergy TN456 four-bay charger is the best option for people who want to helicopter-parent their batteries, potentially making them last longer. It lets you set custom charge rates from 300 to 1,000 milliamperes (mA) to charge a variety of battery sizes at their most efficient rates. It also allows you to keep a close eye on your batteries’ capacity, voltage, internal resistance, and charge times. Unlike the rest of our picks, this charger is compatible with both lithium- and nickel-based batteries, and its size-adjustable slots let you charge a wide variety of battery types, including AA, AAA, AAAA, and C (the only one of our picks to charge the latter).