Building a battery tab spot welder from a capacitor bank is one of the most useful tool projects for any battery pack builder. Commercial spot welders cost ₹5,000-25,000 in India, but a DIY capacitor-discharge spot welder can be built for ₹1,500-3,000 with comparable welding quality. This guide covers capacitor bank sizing, trigger circuit design, and electrode construction for reliable 18650 nickel strip welding.
What Is a Battery Tab Spot Welder?
A spot welder joins two metal pieces by passing a very high current (hundreds of amps) through them for a very short time (milliseconds). The resistance at the contact point generates intense localised heat, fusing the metals together without heating the surrounding area.
For battery pack building, spot welders join nickel strips to 18650 cell terminals. Unlike soldering (which applies sustained heat that damages cells), spot welding delivers energy in a brief pulse that does not penetrate to the cell interior.
Capacitor Bank Design
The capacitor bank stores electrical energy and releases it in a short burst through the welding electrodes:
Energy stored: E = 0.5 x C x V^2
For welding 0.15mm nickel strip to 18650:
Required energy: 5-15 Joules per weld
Typical design: 6 x 10,000uF 25V capacitors in parallel
Total capacitance: 60,000uF (0.06F)
Charge voltage: 12-18V
Energy at 16V: 0.5 x 0.06 x 16^2 = 7.68J
Energy at 18V: 0.5 x 0.06 x 18^2 = 9.72J
Peak discharge current (depends on circuit resistance):
With 5 milliohm total resistance: I = 16V / 0.005 = 3,200A peak
Actual weld current: 500-1500A (weld resistance limits peak)
Capacitor selection: Use low-ESR capacitors rated for pulse discharge. Automotive-grade electrolytic capacitors (Nichicon, Panasonic) or supercapacitors. In India, salvage high-quality capacitors from old UPS units for free.
Charging and Trigger Circuit
Charging circuit:
12V power supply → Current limiting resistor (10 ohm, 10W)
→ Capacitor bank → Indicator LED when charged
Charge time: T = R x C = 10 x 0.06 = 0.6s
Trigger circuit (MOSFET switch):
Capacitor bank (+) → MOSFET drain → Welding electrode (+)
MOSFET gate ← Foot switch or push button
MOSFET: IRFP4110 (100V, 180A) or parallel pair of IRF3205
Add gate driver (TC4420) for fast switching
Timing control (optional but recommended):
Arduino Nano → MOSFET gate via TC4420
Configurable pulse: 5-20ms in 1ms steps
Foot switch triggers single pulse
LED indicates pulse duration setting
Electrode and Probe Design
Electrodes must be low-resistance copper with pointed tips spaced 3-5mm apart:
- Material: Pure copper rod, 3-4mm diameter
- Tip shape: Flat or slightly domed, 1.5-2mm contact area
- Spacing: 3-5mm between electrode tips
- Cable: 10AWG or thicker silicone wire, as short as possible
- Holder: 3D-printed or wooden handle with spring-loaded electrodes
Electrode tips must be kept clean and flat. After every 50-100 welds, dress the tips with fine sandpaper to remove oxide buildup.
Weld Settings for Different Strips
| Nickel Strip | Pulse Energy | Pulse Duration | Charge Voltage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.1mm pure Ni | 3-6J | 5-8ms | 10-14V |
| 0.15mm pure Ni | 6-10J | 8-12ms | 14-16V |
| 0.2mm pure Ni | 10-15J | 12-18ms | 16-18V |
| Ni-plated steel | 8-15J | 10-15ms | 15-18V |
FAQ
Can I use a car battery instead of a capacitor bank?
Yes, many DIY builders use a car battery with a solenoid relay (starter relay) as the switch. The car battery can deliver 500+ amps easily. The challenge is precise timing — without a MOSFET/Arduino timer, pulse duration depends on how quickly you release the foot switch. Capacitor banks give more consistent, repeatable welds.
Why are my welds blowing through the nickel strip?
Too much energy or too small contact area. Reduce charge voltage by 2V, ensure electrodes have flat tips with good contact, and check that electrode spacing is 3-5mm. Also verify you are using pure nickel (not nickel-plated steel, which requires different settings).
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