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[email protected] June 21st 06 03:14 PM

Vector Battery Charger
 

Harry Krause wrote:
Last year I bought a Vector battery charger, the blue "marine" model
that has 2/10/20/35 amp charge rates, and I've used it a couple of times
to charge my tractor battery, car battery and boat batteries. It works
well as a charger at the 2/10/20 rates. Never tried the 35 amp rate.

But the charger also "reconditions" batteries, or so the advertising and
manual say, using a 24-hour cycle to desulfate battery plates. I've
never used this feature, but I loaned the charger to a buddy and he
reports that it actually revived two batteries he was about to toss. I
don't have any other details.

My one gripe about the charger is that its LED readouts are virtually
impossible to read outdoors, even in indirect light.


Is this the model your 'buddy' Larry from S. Carolina swears by?
I have an old charger kicking around but will be buying a deep
discharge marine battery soon and was wondering if I should just go
with the old unit or upgrade to a 'smart charger'.


[email protected] June 23rd 06 05:01 PM

Vector Battery Charger
 
I snipped this from another forum
You can also try a desulfator such as Pulsetech, Batteryminder (or
Battery Minder), Solarigizer, and other pulse desulfators and oils and
chemicals such as the ones by Battery Doctors. These pulse desulfator
devices, in my opinion, however, dry out the batteries prematurely,
causing shorter life than normal, which is not stated in manufacturer's
review or consumer reviews.



wrote:
Harry Krause wrote:
Last year I bought a Vector battery charger, the blue "marine" model
that has 2/10/20/35 amp charge rates, and I've used it a couple of times
to charge my tractor battery, car battery and boat batteries. It works
well as a charger at the 2/10/20 rates. Never tried the 35 amp rate.

But the charger also "reconditions" batteries, or so the advertising and
manual say, using a 24-hour cycle to desulfate battery plates. I've
never used this feature, but I loaned the charger to a buddy and he
reports that it actually revived two batteries he was about to toss. I
don't have any other details.

My one gripe about the charger is that its LED readouts are virtually
impossible to read outdoors, even in indirect light.


Is this the model your 'buddy' Larry from S. Carolina swears by?
I have an old charger kicking around but will be buying a deep
discharge marine battery soon and was wondering if I should just go
with the old unit or upgrade to a 'smart charger'.



[email protected] June 23rd 06 06:32 PM

Vector Battery Charger
 

wrote:
I snipped this from another forum
You can also try a desulfator such as Pulsetech, Batteryminder (or
Battery Minder), Solarigizer, and other pulse desulfators and oils and
chemicals such as the ones by Battery Doctors. These pulse desulfator
devices, in my opinion, however, dry out the batteries prematurely,
causing shorter life than normal, which is not stated in manufacturer's
review or consumer reviews.


Did you form your opinon following observations of batteries in the
same application with as well as without pusle desulfators? If not,
what prompted you to form this opinion?

There's never a free lunch. It's my opinion that the option of frying
the heck out of a plate by applying mondo current to achieve
desulfation can't be all that good for the battery. :-)


Eisboch June 23rd 06 08:12 PM

Vector Battery Charger
 

wrote in message
ups.com...

wrote:
I snipped this from another forum
You can also try a desulfator such as Pulsetech, Batteryminder (or
Battery Minder), Solarigizer, and other pulse desulfators and oils and
chemicals such as the ones by Battery Doctors. These pulse desulfator
devices, in my opinion, however, dry out the batteries prematurely,
causing shorter life than normal, which is not stated in manufacturer's
review or consumer reviews.


Did you form your opinon following observations of batteries in the
same application with as well as without pusle desulfators? If not,
what prompted you to form this opinion?

There's never a free lunch. It's my opinion that the option of frying
the heck out of a plate by applying mondo current to achieve
desulfation can't be all that good for the battery. :-)


It is not intended to be a steady diet for your batteries. If it doesn't
need desulfaration (whoo boy, is *that* a word?) you shouldn't do it.

What it does is bring batteries that have been abnormally discharged back to
life.

Eisboch

www.eisboch.com





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