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Battery question for Larry
Larry (or whoever else jumps in),
I know there was a recent thread on this but Google didn't turn up the clear answer I'm looking for. I know it's theoretically better to keep batteries on a trickle charge and warm over the winter but it costs me $70 to have them taken out of the boat and stored by the yard. (Nevermind the reasons why I don't want to take them out myself and home to my basement.) I've got a good three stage charger in the boat. If I put a good charge on my two AGM's just before the shrink wrap goes on and leave them till early spring with no further attention, will I have reduced their life and strength enough that the $70 would have been a good investment? If the difference between warm, charged, and dead, cold storage is just around the theoretical margins, I'm inclined to leave them in place this year. I'm in Maine which isn't quite as cold as people think, at least on the coast. These two year old batteries get pretty light use with a 15 hp diesel, a few lights, and frequent dockside charging from shore power. I don't leave the charger on all the time so they don't micro cycle but they seldom get pulled down very far either. -- Roger Long |
Battery question for Larry
On Sat, 28 Oct 2006 13:02:20 GMT, "Roger Long"
wrote: I've got a good three stage charger in the boat. If I put a good charge on my two AGM's just before the shrink wrap goes on and leave them till early spring with no further attention, will I have reduced their life and strength enough that the $70 would have been a good investment? If the difference between warm, charged, and dead, cold storage is just around the theoretical margins, I'm inclined to leave them in place this year. Shouldn't be a problem. Most folks with really large batteries like 8Ds do that because they are too much trouble to wrestle on and off the boat. After your final charge in the fall I'd recommend removing the battery cables to eliminate all possibility of a leakage path. Recharge promptly in the spring at first opportunity. |
Battery question for Larry
Roger Long wrote:
I know it's theoretically better to keep batteries on a trickle charge and warm over the winter but it costs me $70 to have them taken out of the boat and stored by the yard. (Nevermind the reasons why I don't want to take them out myself and home to my basement.) .... I would vote in the "no-problem" camp. The self discharge rate of AGM's is very low, and in the winter temps should be a quarter of the summer rate, or less. If you're able to visit the boat a few times, you should check the voltage to make sure nothing as gone awry. And a small solar panel might not be a bad investment In my case, I have a solar panels (150W) under the shrinkwrap that keeps a small charge on the large flooded house bank. The AGM starter bats (Optima red top) can fend for themselves. |
Battery question for Larry
"Jeff" wrote in message . .. ... In my case, I have a solar panels (150W) under the shrinkwrap that keeps a small charge on the large flooded house bank. The AGM starter bats (Optima red top) can fend for themselves. 150 watt solar panels? Who makes them? And they work installed under the shrinkwrap? Eisboch |
Battery question for Larry
"Jeff" wrote in message . .. Roger Long wrote: I know it's theoretically better to keep batteries on a trickle charge and warm over the winter but it costs me $70 to have them taken out of the boat and stored by the yard. (Nevermind the reasons why I don't want to take them out myself and home to my basement.) ... I would vote in the "no-problem" camp. The self discharge rate of AGM's is very low, and in the winter temps should be a quarter of the summer rate, or less. If you're able to visit the boat a few times, you should check the voltage to make sure nothing as gone awry. And a small solar panel might not be a bad investment In my case, I have a solar panels (150W) under the shrinkwrap that keeps a small charge on the large flooded house bank. The AGM starter bats (Optima red top) can fend for themselves. *Under* the shrink wrap? I though solar panels had to get direct sunlight. SBV |
Battery question for Larry
Eisboch wrote:
"Jeff" wrote in message . .. ... In my case, I have a solar panels (150W) under the shrinkwrap that keeps a small charge on the large flooded house bank. The AGM starter bats (Optima red top) can fend for themselves. 150 watt solar panels? Who makes them? And they work installed under the shrinkwrap? They are three 50 watt panels, on the hardtop. On a sunny day, they do get into "charge" mode. I've never read the exact current, but perhaps this winter I'll have a chance because I have a new charge controller that reads the current. Also in the late winter, I cut a hole in the shrink over one of the panels, and from that point on there is plenty of juice |
Battery question for Larry
Scotty wrote:
*Under* the shrink wrap? I though solar panels had to get direct sunlight. There is certainly some attenuation. But if direct sunlight can give me 8 Amps, its not unreasonable to get one Amp with the cover on. If you had a small portable panel, it should obviously be mounted outside the wrap. |
Battery question for Larry
"Jeff" wrote in message . .. Eisboch wrote: 150 watt solar panels? Who makes them? And they work installed under the shrinkwrap? They are three 50 watt panels, on the hardtop. On a sunny day, they do get into "charge" mode. I've never read the exact current, but perhaps this winter I'll have a chance because I have a new charge controller that reads the current. Also in the late winter, I cut a hole in the shrink over one of the panels, and from that point on there is plenty of juice Cool. I had a single, 50 watt panel on an RV. Direct sunshine produced slightly over 2.5 amps. I thought you had a single, 150 watt panel and was curious where you got it. Eisboch |
Battery question for Larry
The best source that I found for solar panels is Wholesale Solar.
http://www.wholesalesolar.com/ The prices were so cheap that I was almost afraid to use them. I did and have been very please with them. -Lee Eisboch wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message . .. Eisboch wrote: 150 watt solar panels? Who makes them? And they work installed under the shrinkwrap? They are three 50 watt panels, on the hardtop. On a sunny day, they do get into "charge" mode. I've never read the exact current, but perhaps this winter I'll have a chance because I have a new charge controller that reads the current. Also in the late winter, I cut a hole in the shrink over one of the panels, and from that point on there is plenty of juice Cool. I had a single, 50 watt panel on an RV. Direct sunshine produced slightly over 2.5 amps. I thought you had a single, 150 watt panel and was curious where you got it. Eisboch |
Battery question for Larry
"Roger Long" wrote in news:wxI0h.11440$0L1.9288
@twister.nyroc.rr.com: These two year old batteries get pretty light use with a 15 hp diesel, a few lights, and frequent dockside charging from shore power. I don't leave the charger on all the time so they don't micro cycle but they seldom get pulled down very far either. I don't advocate constant charging on batteries that are stored. I recommend a SIMPLE automatic shutoff charger put on them overnight ONCE a month during the storage period, with the batteries completely disconnected so there's little external leakage over the dead period...just disconnect their terminals. ONE a month, not a continuous trickle which usually results in them gassing with a little overcharging, no matter how much a boat dealer charged for the chargers...(c; As to pulling them.....they should be stored ABOVE 0C, so there's no possiblity of them freezing, even if discharged inadvertently. AGMs and gelcells have no place to expand to all wadded up like they are so anything the might freeze them will simply destroy them. If the boat's going to sit on the hard with no internal heat in -20F winter...pull 'em. Another factor might be a self-preservation issue. Batteries are always subject to internal shorting...and subsequent explosions. If anything warps a plate...like really cold weather...a simple plate-plate short will blow the thing apart, turning the acid electrolyte into a steam explosion, distributed evenly over everything left in the boat. You have to weigh that $70 against this Worst Case Scenario....It's your call...(c; (If you ever get a chance to look around in a boat the battery exploded inside of, please take the time to look around. It never ceases to amaze me how it can etch a fork buried in a tightly closed drawer on the other end of the boat from that battery!) -- -- (shameless tagline) -- If you're sending someone some Styrofoam, what do you pack it in? |
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