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Del Cecchi May 1st 05 04:53 PM


"Richard J Kinch" wrote in message
...
Gene Kearns writes:

If you have some sort of objective scientific explanation reaching
beyond having seen a car battery explode and consequently becoming
afraid of them.... I'd like to hear it.


The explanation is simply that batteries are more or less mismatched. See
my earlier posts. As long as there is a mismatch, you cannot get twice
the
watt-hours out of a pair of batteries in parallel versus a single. One
will always load the other. There is also a risk of severe overload if a
cell should short; this risk is simply not present in a series
arrangement;
thus my recommendation to insert fusible links in each parallel branch.
Aside from the output degradation, and the shorted-cell risk, yes, you can
put well-matched batteries in parallel. It is common in certain
applications as a compromise. If series is possible, then use series.


The series combo dies as soon as the weakest link battery is discharged.
And it is trickier to recharge.

del



Bill McKee May 1st 05 06:52 PM

They may be mismatched, but I ahve only had a couple of batteries short
cells. And this is in a unch of different vehicles and 44 years of cars /
truck ownership. Go for the parallel and enjoy longer pleasure.

"Richard J Kinch" wrote in message
...
Gene Kearns writes:

If you have some sort of objective scientific explanation reaching
beyond having seen a car battery explode and consequently becoming
afraid of them.... I'd like to hear it.


The explanation is simply that batteries are more or less mismatched. See
my earlier posts. As long as there is a mismatch, you cannot get twice
the
watt-hours out of a pair of batteries in parallel versus a single. One
will always load the other. There is also a risk of severe overload if a
cell should short; this risk is simply not present in a series
arrangement;
thus my recommendation to insert fusible links in each parallel branch.
Aside from the output degradation, and the shorted-cell risk, yes, you can
put well-matched batteries in parallel. It is common in certain
applications as a compromise. If series is possible, then use series.




Richard J Kinch May 2nd 05 04:45 AM

Del Cecchi writes:

The series combo dies as soon as the weakest link battery is discharged.


Consider that any battery is by definition already a series of cells. So
what you say is a potential problem in any arrangement.


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