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"Mark" wrote in news:1156829173.178462.265980
@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com: From a University of Washington paper: "If plates are exposed above the electrolyte then the capacity of the exposed plate areas has been lost and cells will likely develop short-circuits because of plate shedding. Batteries with exposed plates should be replaced." You seem to be saying exposed plate area can be recovered by recharging. That's apparently not so. I once accidently exposed about 50% of the plate area on a battery, and it lost about 50% of its capacity; soon thereafter it died due to shorted plates, probably from plate shedding. Exactly as the UW paper described. In order to "sulphate", conversion of lead metal into lead sulphate, it takes sulphuric acid, not air. Lead sulphate is suspended in the solution of the electrolyte, after it has released its electrons to us. I don't see how exposing lead to air can eat it away. That's what the posts are doing all the time, and they're lead. No, I disagree with the professors, I'm afraid. Using a battery with low electrolyte eats away the BOTTOM of the plates, sometimes bad enough to eat holes in them we cannot recover because the electrolyte still has the same acid it started out with, in a more concentrated form, and the electronics freed must come from the plates still submerged, eating them away far worse than the engineers intended. So, if anything is "damaged" or "unrecoverable" it MIGHT be the submerged portion of the plates, not the exposed-to-air top, which won't get eaten away discharging at all. See my point? It's the submerged part that needs to be recharged very badly, not the exposed part. But, alas, we're talking of extreme conditions, not the conditions in your boat. You don't discharge the battery severely, or I hope you don't. You also didn't let the battery get THAT FAR down in electrolyte, just a little below the plates, exposing them. When you submerge these plates, that haven't been holed permanently, with DISTILLED WATER ONLY, please....The battery will nicely recover, after a few charge/discharge cycles, to its soft plated old self, the tops of the plates resoftening by the cycling, like we're SUPPOSED to do to a brand new battery that's just had its initial electrolyte charge poured into it. Of course, noone in reality ever does a proper cycling of a new battery to soften up those plates. That takes too much time from our busy life. The dealer doesn't do it, either. He pours the electrolyte pack into the holes, helter skelter, and never checks the gravity again to see which cells are really hot and which are not-so-hot...caused by differences and impurities in the plates. If we had any brains, we'd dump this crap and go back to "Edison Cells", those Nickel-Iron-Potassium Hydroxide beasts just outside my hamshack. Mine were made in the late 40's for a telephone system and STILL have the capacity stamped into the cases....(c; Ni-Fe batteries are only bad for the battery business....never needing constant replacing and recycling as Pb's do....the reason they just HAD to be eliminated. http://www.beutilityfree.com/battery...tery_flyer.pdf Don't worry about how deep you discharge them. Recharge them when the lights get too dim...(c; It doesn't hurt them at all. You don't even need a regulated charger. -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
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