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"Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in
: Nobody sugggested that fusing isn;t necessary. Just that is does not necessarily protect against a shorted cell. I had a cell short once and all it did was lower the voltage of the battery and discharge the parallel battery. No dramatic event, just dead batteries. If you had measured the voltage across the internal straps on the "shorted cell", I doubt you would have found it to be zero, like a shorted cell must be. You'd have found a "dead cell", one whos acid and lead had been converted into lead sulphate crystals that can't be charged. Big difference. -- Larry |
"Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in
: Subject: One or 2 groups of Batteries?? From: "Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom Newsgroups: rec.boats.cruising "Rosalie B." wrote in message ... Sorry, Rosalie. He's quite wound up this morning...(C; -- Larry |
"Larry" wrote in message ... "Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in : Nobody sugggested that fusing isn;t necessary. Just that is does not necessarily protect against a shorted cell. I had a cell short once and all it did was lower the voltage of the battery and discharge the parallel battery. No dramatic event, just dead batteries. If you had measured the voltage across the internal straps on the "shorted cell", I doubt you would have found it to be zero, like a shorted cell must be. You'd have found a "dead cell", one whos acid and lead had been converted into lead sulphate crystals that can't be charged. Big difference. -- Larry How would I go about measuring the voltage across the internal straps? |
"Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in
: How would I go about measuring the voltage across the internal straps? Put the meter probes down into the cell hole and press them into two adjacent plate ends. They're flat. You'll be measuring the voltage across the one cell your holing. Don't forget to wash off the meter probes in clean water with your hands after you're done. Submarine batteries are easier...individual cells...but I wouldn't want to be 150' down when there was a short...6,250AH cells. The battery shop at the Charleston Naval Shipyard rebuilt diesel sub batteries when I was a young sailor. They'd take an overhead crane and pick up the plates out of the rubber case by its big terminals. After it drained for a while, they'd lay the plates on a regular wooden pallet. A steel bar, probably 2" in diameter was placed across both terminals to short the plates. That bar would glow red hot for hours on a cell with NO ELECTROLYTE, running on the acid left in the separators. I was always fascinated in that shop and learned a lot about battery maintenance and repair from the experts that had done it for years. In the charging theatre, the cells were set in lines with aisles between so each cell could be constantly monitored and tested. Huge conductors were attached to each cell from overhead. Standing above it all was the operator's control room, looking over the babies on the floor. The "charger" was another BUILDING with huge, open-faced generators powered by the shipyard's steam plant system. Each cell was "cycled" 3 times to soften the plates before it was charged for the "load test" it had to pass before being loaded back on railroad cars back to the subs for replacement. Huge load banks with monstrous fans carried off the energy discharged from the cells. There was enough heat coming out of the building to heat all the homes in the city all winter...just vented outside. Acid was recycled but used to be just dumped into the river way back. Even small batteries the Navy owned (er, ah, and some lucky sailors' batteries) could be easily repaired, bad cells replaced then the whole thing brought up and standarized like new. There was one under the rear seat of my 1967 Volkswagen Campmobile (Kombi) that took up the whole compartment. It was a Greyhound bus battery that was restored at the battery shop by some friends. The poor VW never charged under 20A. The shop converted it from a diesel starting battery to an 850AH long-life deep cycle. Starting the little 57hp VW engine didn't even dim the headlights!...(c; I used to camp with it where there was no power, leaving the drop lights in my campsite on all night, all weekend. Fans, TV, we had it all...(c; -- Larry |
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