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On Sat, 17 Nov 2007 07:13:38 -0800 (PST), "
wrote: It is my understanding that a battery needs "exercised". Long periods of non-usage (over the fall/winter/spring months) will result in the battery loosing its charge and not be able to accept a charge. With that said, is it possible that if I wired my battery (in parallel) to my Ford truck battery, will it be "exercised" and be ready for another full year of boating, or will it damage the PWC battery? I'm trying to avoid the cost of trading in the old battery and purchasing a new battery each summer. First, I would suggest that something is wrong with the charging system in the PWC if you are having to replace batteries every year. Secondly, wiring it to the truck in parallel wouldn't be a good idea for a variety of reasons including over charge, unequal charge, etc. Third, get a "floating" charger rather than a constant "trickle" charger. The floating charger will turn itself on and off as the battery requires over winter. You don't really need to remove it from the PWC - just unconnect it from the PWC (leave it in), hook the charger to it and plug it in. Unless, of course, that isn't convenient - in that case just remove it, put it somewhere you can plug in the charger and let it sit over winter. I use three floater units on my Ranger over winter and haven't had a failure yet. Unless you count the time I left the key and radio on, but that was Scott's fault. :) |
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