I was planning to do this with a Pi 4 to make a mini laptop, but have a question. Is there a way to implement software battery percentage monitoring, like a mobile device has?
this is so dodgy and dangerous. that Lithium polymer battery will explode and catch fire if it over charges and discharges. anyone watching, you should ALWAYS use a charge controller
Thanks for this quick video.
I wanted to power a raspberry pi with an 2 year old laptop-ish battery. The battery is still good (3.7V lipo, 9000 mAh) .
I was planning to do this with a Pi 4 to make a mini laptop, but have a question. Is there a way to implement software battery percentage monitoring, like a mobile device has?
you could try to use analog input from the lipo, I'm not sure though
What is the maximum current output and can it power the pi4
What's the name of this battery
Whats the PowerBank Module Part # please?
Can I use this method for raspberry pi 4
I noticed you plug the USB into the accessory USB on the pi !!!!
hi, may I have the circuit for the module?
this is so dodgy and dangerous. that Lithium polymer battery will explode and catch fire if it over charges and discharges. anyone watching, you should ALWAYS use a charge controller
The powerbank module used there already have inbuilt overcharge and discharge protection. Also it has a short circuit protection.
@@SPARKLERSWeAreTheMakers Whats the PowerBank Module Part # please? I find this brilliant what you've done
@@MartinOShieldWindyCitySDRYep, without the part number the video has very little use except bragging…
"WFIdeo"