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On Sat, 20 Dec 2003 19:39:04 +0100, "Ric" wrote:
I have just bought a couple of Delphi Freedom marine deep cycle batteries for my service bank. Is there a recommended minimum voltage below which one should not discharge? Also, if the nominal capacity is (say) 100Ah, is that measured between standard voltages or is it measured from a nominal full charge (with full charge voltage dependent on the charging system) until totally discharged - ie 0v? Or is there a standard "never go below" voltage which manufacturers use? A dead battery with 6 working cells will show over 12V with no load. Voltage is not an indication of charge unless you have a standard load, like the 50A "battery tester" used by mechanics to test batteries and alternators. Mine cost $19 from Harbor Freight made by Chinese slaves. Lead-acid batteries' charge status is shown by a temperature compensated specific gravity, usually a float inside a glass "baster" with a thermometer to measure the electrolyte temperature and a compensating graph to correct the reading on the float. Of course, in our haste, we sealed up, or at least made it too inconvenient to measure in most modern batteries. The specific gravity of a fully charged lead-acid battery cell is 1.270 at 72F. As the battery is discharged, the heavy acid is converted into lead sulphate as it eats the plates. The acid is used up, we hope, before it eats irreplaceable holes in the lead plates we cannot recharge. As the acid is used up, the resistance of the electrolyte increases, causing the voltage drop under load you see on your voltmeter. A "discharged" battery is never discharged fully. If it were, the electrolyte would be a near insulator preventing us from recharging it! We consider a specific gravity of 1.150 at 72F to be "discharged" as far as is prudent. You'll notice the voltmeter drops awful as you load a battery in this condition, trying to pull electrons through this much resistance, so you recharge it, IMMEDIATELY if you know what's good for you and your battery. Lead acid batteries should NEVER be left in a discharged condition. The lead sulphate in solution in the diluted acid can be "charged" apart and redeposited on the lead plates bringing us back to life. IF we let the lead sulphate sit, quietly, without agitation, it CRYSTALIZES into lead sulphate solids, which falls out of the solution into the bottom of the battery. This is BAD. It's very stable this way and won't dissolve so we can charge it, ever again. Because the acid was used up to create it, when you charge the battery, there's little acid recovered and little metallic lead deposited back on the plates. When the acid is mostly used up, everyone says you have a "dead cell" which won't charge much, and we trade in the battery for a new one. Recharging immediately reduces this crystalizing to a minimum and your battery may last for many more years. The only real way to measure "charge" is with a hydrometer calibrated to measure the specific gravity. Even the little float balls hydrometer is better than a voltmeter as the voltage depends on load current. By the time the voltmeter drops with no load, it's too late. The best other way is with an ampere-hour meter you can buy at marine stores like Waste Marine. It had a counter that multiplies amps times hours as you charge the battery, then measures amps times hours when you discharge the battery. It reads out directly in ampere-hours remaining from the little computer inside or has lights to show E to F. Of course, it says BOAT on it so the price is tripled, as usual. I have an intelligent battery charging system on my boat that charges up to a threshold 14v with an asymptotically decreasing charging current, and a battery controller with which I can set alarms to warn me of impending doom on the discharge cycle. At what level should I set the alarm to get best use out of my batteries? The less far you discharge lead acid batteries, the longer they will last but the less power you get to use out of them before recharging. It's a tradeoff. As the voltage measured is load dependent, it's very hard to come up with a readable voltage as your load changes. If there's no load on the discharged battery, it'll read 12.7V, even though it's discharged as far as it should go. As you add load, this voltage drops rapidly. So, the best way to judge is to watch the voltmeter as the load is increased. You'll soon learn to judge when it's dropping too far for comfort. The other problem is the way the stupid voltmeters are connected......at the panel on the other end of the wires carrying all that current. The voltmeter DOESN'T measure the battery voltage. It measures the voltage at the breaker panel its mounted in, which is stupid. As the boat ages, its connections naturally become corroded. Corroded terminals have increased resistance. When you pull current through corroded terminals, the connections, ANY connections, cause the voltage to drop back at the panel where the meter is....even though the poor battery is fully charged! This worsens as time goes by, so you think, from the reading, the battery is toast. When you buy a new battery, the terminals all get cleaned so the voltmeter problem goes away. You credit the new battery. I, on the other hand, am standing at the battery boneyard with my 50A test load meter picking up some real bargains (free!) before the salvors get there....(c; Thanks! The voltmeter should be connected by separate, small wires, directly to the battery under test. Put a 1A fuse in series with the small wires in case there's a short that would melt them and start a fire. Without the load current going through the connections the meter is reading from, you can read the battery voltage, not the panel voltage. They do it their way because, as usual, it's CHEAP. It's called "remote sensing" in the power management biz.... I like the "asymptotically decreasing charging current" charger. So don't boat supply places! Boat is the only place I know where you can buy a 10A charger for $200....OUCH! Another bad idea is a charger that's TOO BIG, whether it's "asymptotically decreasing charging current" or not! You should not charge a lead acid battery over about 25% of its capacity rating....i.e. 25A on a 100AH battery. Even that is too much as it charges. Regular battery chargers, the cheap ones, taper off the charge by simply running from a 15V power supply. As the battery charges, it's voltage rises rapidly at specific gravity about 1.250, so the battery voltage comes up to the charger's natural voltage and the current drops a lot. But there's a real problem charging lead-acid batteries....HEAT. If I shove 50A through any device with 14V of voltage drop, battery or load, heat is generated....50 X 14 = 700 watts! When the battery is charging, from dead, notice how it doesn't get warm until the charge is nearly full. The energy you're shoving in is being converted to a chemical change, pulling lead sulphate apart into lead ions and creating sulfuric acid by a reaction with the hydrogen in water. This takes up the power. But, as it reaches full charge, we've converted all the lead sulphates into lead and acid and there's nothing else to convert, so the current ends up causing HEAT in the cells. If we kept charging it at 50A, a constant current charger like you use to charge NiCd or Ni-Metal Hydride batteries, 700 watts would MELT THE PLATES, which are lead and soft anyways! That's why we want the charge to taper off, not remain constant. If melting plates EVER touch, the cell, of course, shorts and you get sprayed with acid in the ensuing explosion! If you ever see a battery not properly encased explode in a boat, you'll not soon forget what it does to EVERYTHING in the boat. The best charger for lead acid batteries is the simply tapering charger that has automatic shutoff from a voltage measuring circuit. The charger turns off at 14.2V and back on again at 13.2-13.5V to replace what you use. Car chargers aren't any good because they are open to corrosion and flooding. A lot of the mumbo-jumbo in $600 boat chargers is simply to justify charging $600 for a charger that costs $60 to make. What I DON'T like about the fancy chargers is all the NOISE they transmit at the dock to tear up the radios, cellphones, stereo and TV. Lionheart has a dual 10A charger that just TEARS UP the HF radio spectrum so bad our HF SSB is totally useless when it's on. The old saturable reactor charger monsters, like the one my captain gave me out of Lionheart, a 40A simple 3-step manual French charger from Amel, makes no noise at all in my shop-stepvan...(c; Well, hope this did you some good. We have dual 700AH banks of tall golf cart batteries for house batteries on Lionheart. POWER is our friend...(c; Larry Chief Engineer S/V Lionheart Charleston Sitting under my ham radio & computer desk are 7 special cells in series, giving me about 16 VDC when the float charger is off. They are 900 AH "Edison" cells made of Nickel and Iron plates suspended in Calcium Hydroxide, a base not acid. Ni-Fe cells, properly cared for, last a lifetime as the reverse chemical process of charging them is complete. The oldest cell, taken out of a very old Holiday Inn when their antiquated manual-switchboard telephone system was replaced is stamped July 8, 1936! The newest cell is 1948. This powers my station in time of emergency, long enough to get the generators fired up, even my computer's UPS. I've had them since the mid 1960s when an old friend, long dead now, gave them to me. He was the Innkeeper, and a ham. Too bad we can't have Ni-Fe batteries any more. The nickel is BAD for the environment as the battery companies that made them (Exide) just dumped the electrolyte into the ground in many places, like Sumter, SC, for instance, and the government busted 'em. Going from no load to 100 amps, drops the stack's voltage about .8V if the terminals are clean.....amazing power source from the turn-of-the-century.....(c; Larry W4CSC NNNN |
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