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#1
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navti wrote in news:1179958931.889112.201180
@p47g2000hsd.googlegroups.com: whats the minimum voltage you would expect on a new battery ? Over 12.5 Larry -- Grade School Physics Factoid: A building cannot freefall into its own footprint without skilled demolition. |
#2
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![]() "Larry" wrote in message ... navti wrote in news:1179958931.889112.201180 @p47g2000hsd.googlegroups.com: whats the minimum voltage you would expect on a new battery ? Over 12.5 Larry -- Grade School Physics Factoid: A building cannot freefall into its own footprint without skilled demolition. Navti, don't listen to Larry. He's a known blowhard extremist. Sometimes he's right but most of the time he's off the mark. He just tends to go to extremes. The best way to check whether or not a battery is any good is to charge it up for a day or so on a good quality three-stage charger that can give that final float charge. Then you need to check it with a volt meter but under a load such as a one or two amp bulb. It should show over 12 volts. If it continues to show over 12 volts for about fifteen or twenty minutes then it's probably in decent shape. Larry apparently doesn't have a clue about testing batteries under a load. Wilbur Hubbard |
#3
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Larry wrote in news:Xns9939C87A94F33noonehomecom@
208.49.80.253: whats the minimum voltage you would expect on a new battery ? Over 12.5 Let me rephrase that, after thinking it over. The voltage on all 6 cells of a lead-acid battery that has "some acid" in it is around 2V/cell. It means NOTHING, except that all 6 cells have some lead and some acid in it. Voltage, in lead acid batteries, isn't important. SPECIFIC GRAVITY is. Now, in a gelcell or AGM battery, there's no way to measure the condition of the acid that puts the POW in POWer. This is precisely why I don't like them. There's no way of telling what the chemical condition of an AGM battery is unless you do a load test over hours to find out when dead is dead. I'm kind of attached to my trusty TEMPERATURE COMPENSATED hydrometer, myself, the ONLY way to tell what the condition of a wetcell is. Why?? When a lead-acid battery is new, the new electrolyte specific gravity, an indication of the amount of acid, knowing the quantity of electrolyte and plate area, is around 1.260 to 1.270. (Take some electrolyte out of the dry cell charger container and measure it with a hydrometer.) The design of the cell is that a certain quantity of acid is available that will produce the maximum electrons (AH capacity), without the acid eating the lead to the point it has unrecoverable holes in it that cannot be replated/recharged. The acid is converted to lead sulphate first. This is measured by measuring the specific gravity of the liquid electrolyte. Ok, a new battery is loaded with electrolyte and just sits there. From that point on, impurities in the plates, mainly iron, form little shorted batteries on the surface of the plates...lead-iron-acid. This eats a tiny spot on the plate...if enough impurities exist, you not the specific gravity of the worst offender drops below 1.26-1.27 further than the others. They all drop a little as there are no pure lead plates, especially at these prices and profit margins. It's ok to recharge a new battery to restore the plating, raising the gravity back up to 1.27 as we recover the acid. "Dead cell" isn't dead. It has just run out of RECOVERABLE acid. The cells in this "dead" AGM battery are in this condition if the cell has been discharged over a week or two because the acid has been unrecoverably converted to stable salts, like lead sulphate crystals. You'll get the gravity (you can't measure in AGM) to rise some....but not back to 1.27 because before that happens, we've run out of ionic lead sulphate that electrical current can split to lead and H2SO4. As there's not enough SO4 to use, charging the hell out of it only results in "gassing", splitting the H2O in the electrolyte into H2, which bonds into hydrogen gas if you do it hard enough, and rises out through the cell's vent....the electrolyte drops as the water is split. (Your boat cells been topped off, lately??)...just a thought...(c; The only way I know of to "test" the condition of gelcell and AGM CAPACITY is to watch how LONG it takes them before their charging voltage gets to 14.2 or 14.3V. If the acid has been eaten up and cannot be recovered, every boaters smiles away because he saw the "meter" rise QUICKLY to 14.2V "in the GREEN" in 20 minutes at 10A. 10A x .33 hours = 3.3AH, the remaining capacity of these hosed AGM babies all sulphated to hell. A "good" dead AGM battery won't come up for HOURS at 10A....10A for 13 hours = 130AH, for instance.....NOT 20 MINUTES. If the dead AGMs rise quickly, they're HOSED and need replacing. Larry -- AGM separator factory in China on Youtube! http://youtube.com/watch?v=jNHR24Gi6A0 |
#4
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![]() The only way I know of to "test" the condition of gelcell and AGM CAPACITY is to watch how LONG it takes them before their charging voltage gets to 14.2 or 14.3V. If the acid has been eaten up and cannot be recovered, every boaters smiles away because he saw the "meter" rise QUICKLY to 14.2V "in the GREEN" in 20 minutes at 10A. 10A x .33 hours = 3.3AH, the remaining capacity of these hosed AGM babies all sulphated to hell. A "good" dead AGM battery won't come up for HOURS at 10A....10A for 13 hours = 130AH, for instance.....NOT 20 MINUTES. If the dead AGMs rise quickly, they're HOSED and need replacing. i contacted another buyer (a boater) and she said "Hi, mine had 10.5V and took about 4 hours to charge (less than I thought) and seems to be holding the charge without problem." that seems a bit suspicious to me. |
#5
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navti wrote in news:1179993861.082602.220690
@p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com: "Hi, mine had 10.5V and took about 4 hours to charge (less than I thought) and seems to be holding the charge without problem." that seems a bit suspicious to me. "To charge to what?", is the question. To charge to 12AH, instead of 130AH it was designed for? That'll happen when most of the plates are gone.... (c; Larry -- Grade School Physics Factoid: A building cannot freefall into its own footprint without skilled demolition. |
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