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Capt. Neal® wrote:
"Gary Schafer" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 18 Apr 2005 19:33:47 -0400, Capt. Neal® wrote: "Steve Firth" wrote in message .. . Capt. Neal® wrote: Never, at any time, does electricity flow THROUGH the internals of a battery Utter ********. Utter truth. A lead/acid yacht battery stores electrical potential in the plates via chemical reaction. If there was a circuit within the battery it would not take or store a charge. CN Maybe you would like to explain to us how current gets from one cell in a battery to the next so that each cell gets charged when a charger is hooked to the battery. Duh! The plates are hardwired together and connected to either the positive or negative poles, but not to each other, as would be the case in the minds of those claiming an internal circuit. I am also still waiting for you to explain how one discharged cell in a battery gets charged from the other cells in the battery by only putting a load on the battery. As I am sure you know that discharged cell will be trying to get charged with it's positive terminal hooked to the negative terminal of the cell that is supposed to be doing the charging. Duh, since the positive plates and the negative plates in each cell are hard wired together with all the other positive and negative plates but not hardwired negative to positive and vice versa, to make a circuit as some claim, and if one cell is discharged to say 1.5 volts while connected to cells charged to 2.2 volts in a circuit with some sort of load between the positive and negative battery terminals the discharged cell takes on a charge just as if a battery charger were connected. The discharged cell doesn't know anything other than the higher voltage is reversing it's chemical reaction from a discharging reaction to a charging reaction. If the battery was a conductor internally, tell me why as you charge a discharged battery the amperage it takes gets less and less until it tapers down to almost nothing. If the cells were connected by a circuit inside the amperage would be constant. CN If "since the positive plates and the negative plates in each cell are hard wired together with all the other positive and negative plates but not hardwired negative to positive and vice versa" how does a battery ever acheive 12 volts. That would put all the cells in parallel and since a lead acid wet cell is 2.2 volts, on average, the battery would only have 2.2 volts. krj |
#2
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![]() "krj" wrote in message ... Capt. Neal® wrote: "Gary Schafer" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 18 Apr 2005 19:33:47 -0400, Capt. Neal® wrote: "Steve Firth" wrote in message .. . Capt. Neal® wrote: Never, at any time, does electricity flow THROUGH the internals of a battery Utter ********. Utter truth. A lead/acid yacht battery stores electrical potential in the plates via chemical reaction. If there was a circuit within the battery it would not take or store a charge. CN Maybe you would like to explain to us how current gets from one cell in a battery to the next so that each cell gets charged when a charger is hooked to the battery. Duh! The plates are hardwired together and connected to either the positive or negative poles, but not to each other, as would be the case in the minds of those claiming an internal circuit. I am also still waiting for you to explain how one discharged cell in a battery gets charged from the other cells in the battery by only putting a load on the battery. As I am sure you know that discharged cell will be trying to get charged with it's positive terminal hooked to the negative terminal of the cell that is supposed to be doing the charging. Duh, since the positive plates and the negative plates in each cell are hard wired together with all the other positive and negative plates but not hardwired negative to positive and vice versa, to make a circuit as some claim, and if one cell is discharged to say 1.5 volts while connected to cells charged to 2.2 volts in a circuit with some sort of load between the positive and negative battery terminals the discharged cell takes on a charge just as if a battery charger were connected. The discharged cell doesn't know anything other than the higher voltage is reversing it's chemical reaction from a discharging reaction to a charging reaction. If the battery was a conductor internally, tell me why as you charge a discharged battery the amperage it takes gets less and less until it tapers down to almost nothing. If the cells were connected by a circuit inside the amperage would be constant. CN If "since the positive plates and the negative plates in each cell are hard wired together with all the other positive and negative plates but not hardwired negative to positive and vice versa" how does a battery ever acheive 12 volts. That would put all the cells in parallel and since a lead acid wet cell is 2.2 volts, on average, the battery would only have 2.2 volts. krj Boy are you dense! The individual CELLs (consisting of a series of plates) are wired in series or they would not add up to 12 volts. But this does not mean the PLATES are wired in series. Plates are either positive or negative and exist independently of each other. Only chemical reactions interact with them. Wires do not. CN |
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