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On 06 Oct 2004 16:07:14 GMT, (Bilgeman) wrote:
frank relates:
-Thank you all for your thoughts. I will see if I can get the battery up to
full charge and keep it there, assuming it was just a maintenance issue.
Hopefully that will get me through the season ( a couple more weeks.)
I'll then get a new battery in the spring.-
Bilge- Loss of water is mainly due to to off-gassing during charging, and
evaporation.
You might already know this, but storing your battery on a concrete floor or a
steel deck will cause it to self-discharge. Happily, plywood or scrap 2x4's are
cheap.
You are aware that case leakage is no longer a problem, right? :)
Of course, I don't believe it either, thus I store my boat batteries
on a little plywood shelf in my wood shop over the winter. :)
Which reminds me, I have to check the general alarm batteries, and the radio
batteries, and the Emergency 24 voltdc circuit batteries...
Jeez...now I'm sorry that I read this thread!
And I still have to finish a set of cabinets that I promised my long
suffering wife last Spring.
Thanks for bringing plywood that up. ;)
Later,
Tom
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