Tattu R-Line 1300mAh 95C Lipo Battery Review and Testing
Aug 24th 2016
So I got contacted a month or so ago by Gens Ace themselves and was offered to test some of their new R-Line packs not currently available. I'd already known about them - they were debuted as "Top Pilot" packs, and were given to various people who I fly with and know for testing (Luke Bannister, Gary Kent, Paul Nurkkala) a few months even before that. From speaking to those who had tested them they found them amazing, so I was super stoked to get to try them myself.
I will say beforehand that the review is a little subjective, I don't have the fancy test equipment that some do to test various stuff - so if you are looking for that kind of information this won't be the place for that (sorry!!). I do go into IR territory, abuse the packs a little, and really just discuss my general opinion on them. In future I'd like to get some proper test equipment, but as you can imagine deciding what to get, and buying it, all take time and money!
So with that in mind, let's see what GensAce have to say about their own lipo.
So as we can see they are packaged well, with a box and bubblewrap inside. There's tape securing the XT60 to the lipo to prevent it from coming loose. Inside the box is also a balance connector "protector". I'm a bit dubious of these, some people love them and others hate them. I'm not really on either camp but won't be using them because I don't for any other lipo I run, and in all honesty they tend to just get in the way as they make the balance connector too bulky.
So with both of the packs out of the box what do we see? First off, a few things. As per the specs they feature 12 gauge power wires, which suggests they allow some serious amps to be drawn. The length of said cables is a good length, not too long and not too short. I've noticed a trend of lipo cable lengths increasing in some of the newer manufacturer lipos, and to be honest it's just annoying - unneeded weight that all matters when racing (imo). The packs themselves are also TINY - there's a picture further down comparing their sizes compared to my other lipos, but these are basically the same size as Turnigy Nano-Tech 1300mAh 4S 25-50C. With that in mind, as you can imagine I'm a little dubious on power - larger C rating lipos tend to be bigger cells to cope with the amp draw, but this is not the case for these.
Weighing in at just shy of 167 grams this pack is certainly a compact and efficient one, it must have some crazy energy density. There's no visible G10 plates in the lipo protecting the cells, so this could be good or bad depending how you tend to fly (let's face it most of us crash regularly). This is really my only concern right now, how well the cells will hold up to abuse. The Graphenes in comparison (HobbyKing) are a fair bit heavier, but offer G10 plates both on the outside of the cells but I believe also between the cells, to really ensure that pack is as rigid as can be. Graphene itself is meant to be pretty brittle compared to the normal plates used in Lipos, so this may have an effect.
So the first thing I noticed straight away is Tattu seem to label the pack on the other side compared to every other brand going - so for this reason I've put the wires facing the other way. In terms of size, we can see it's essentially the smallest of the 1300's I have, comparing to the Bolt, Nano-Tech, RFI-Power and the other slightly larger 1500's.
I will first off state I do not run a break-in process. I have tried and tested break-in methods on various lipos over the years, and I have found absolutely no difference to pack performance, IR, or anything else. Perhaps the new chemistry may change that, but from what I gather if anything it would be exactly the same. I still take the first flight a little easy, but only in the sense I don't have crazy punch-outs for the solid 2 minutes.
I managed to use them around 10-15 cycles each last week, and during one of my middle flights at a fun-fly event at LHC I forgot I was flying a 1300 with a smaller capacity (I tend to fly 1500 or 1800's), and so I actually drained it far more than I meant to and literally dropped out the sky. I immediately checked the cell voltage and they were around 2.9-3.0v each, so a little lower than I would normally discharge (3.75v), but even so, this would be a good test for how the stand up to their abuse. As you can see, charging the lipos back after being sat for a few hours meant I put a whopping 1467 mAh back into the lipo. This means that the 1300mAh genuinely gives you around 1300mAh if you leave around 20% in the pack as you should. Legit ratings are always nice so this was great. I also noticed no increase in IR, no extre heat heat and also no puffing - so it would seem they are up to withstanding the abuse a little bit too.
Yesterday was my last flight day for testing, and so they got cycled another couple of times while flying to really see if anything was to change in my conclusion. I am happy to say nothing has. I haven't actually said about how they fly yet, so we'll get onto that now.
Comparing their internal resistance to my other widely used packs we can see they do pretty damn good. They have essentially matched a 1500mAh at a super low internal resistance. The same charger was used to ensure the results were kept fair.