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ME ME ME wrote:
SWS, I remember when they said you could not store your battery on a concrete floor or it would discharge. They recommended storing the battery on wood. Is this what you are talking about when you say old batteries were "leaky". NO! The concrete fable is just that. Concrete is just a big heat sink. Rob |
On Mon, 25 Apr 2005 14:51:53 GMT, Gene Kearns
wrote: On Mon, 25 Apr 2005 10:33:51 -0400, trainfan1 wrote: ME ME ME wrote: SWS, I remember when they said you could not store your battery on a concrete floor or it would discharge. They recommended storing the battery on wood. Is this what you are talking about when you say old batteries were "leaky". NO! The concrete fable is just that. Concrete is just a big heat sink. NO! The concrete fable was not a fable.... Concrete is also just a big sponge, absorbing water from the ground beneath. During the days of battery construction using asphaltic cases, a potential could be set up through the case, if there was enough water on the outside of it.... held there by the damp concrete. Once battery construction employed impermeable cases, this phenomenon disappeared and ... over time.... became a fable. Modern batteries have a lower internal resistance and can allow unregulated power supplies to create a higher charging voltage than those intended by the original motor designers.... assuming they even foresaw the use of a charging system to run gee-whiz electronics, rather than just replenish a starting battery.... Check the manuals for electronics.... many now support much higher voltages than 12-14V. If they don't however, you risk frying something.... What he said. :) Later, Tom |
Gene Kearns wrote: NO! The concrete fable was not a fable.... Concrete is also just a big sponge, absorbing water from the ground beneath. During the days of battery construction using asphaltic cases, a potential could be set up through the case, if there was enough water on the outside of it.... held there by the damp concrete. What would keep the wood from absorbing moisture, then? Wood is just as much of a "big sponge" as the concrete it's sitting on. |
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