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Batteries over winter...
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote in
: So the plan is to just leave them in place and put trickle chargers on each battery over winter. Any thoughts? Take them out and store them above 32F. Do not trickle them dry all winter. Charge them once a month with an automatic SHUTOFF battery charger. Trickle overcharging, and it will, just destroys them and does nothing about plate sulfation. -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
Batteries over winter...
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 01 Oct 2006 09:46:10 -0400, Larry wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote in m: So the plan is to just leave them in place and put trickle chargers on each battery over winter. Any thoughts? Take them out and store them above 32F. Do not trickle them dry all winter. Charge them once a month with an automatic SHUTOFF battery charger. Trickle overcharging, and it will, just destroys them and does nothing about plate sulfation. Why store above 32F? That makes no sense. If the batteries are fairly new, fully charged and hold a charge they won't freeze. All batteries slowly discharge due to internal current within the battery. If the batteries are a couple of years or more old there is an increasing risk of them freezing because they don't hold a charge as long as a new battery. I had one freeze and split even though it was fully charged before storage (outside and left in the boat). That's why I like to keep a float charger on them when stored in an unheated area. Eisboch |
Batteries over winter...
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 01 Oct 2006 09:46:10 -0400, Larry wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote in m: So the plan is to just leave them in place and put trickle chargers on each battery over winter. Any thoughts? Take them out and store them above 32F. Do not trickle them dry all winter. Charge them once a month with an automatic SHUTOFF battery charger. Trickle overcharging, and it will, just destroys them and does nothing about plate sulfation. Why store above 32F? That makes no sense. BTW .... my comments relate to lead/acid batteries, maintenance free or regular. I don't know how AGMs deal with freezing temps. Eisboch |
Batteries over winter...
On Sun, 01 Oct 2006 09:46:10 -0400, Larry wrote: Take them out and store them above 32F. Do not trickle them dry all winter. Charge them once a month with an automatic SHUTOFF battery charger. Trickle overcharging, and it will, just destroys them and does nothing about plate sulfation. A trickle charger and a float maintainer charger are not the same. A float charger will not overcharge or run a battery dry. A trickle charger can. Eisboch |
Batteries over winter...
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 01 Oct 2006 09:46:10 -0400, Larry wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote in m: So the plan is to just leave them in place and put trickle chargers on each battery over winter. More information about batteries then you need is at http://www.uuhome.de/william.darden/ |
Batteries over winter...
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote in
: Why store above 32F? That makes no sense. None at all.... -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
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