Levitation
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2009
- Messages
- 1,300
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-248 C
- Hull Identification Number
- fmlt2510f809
- Vessel Name
- Charlotte Ann
This is a cross post of some of my babblings on another forum.
Became involved with batteries at a professional level when I was 19. Now these were fleets of 4000 pound monsters, but they were still just batteries.
So, I have opinions - hoo boy, do I.
My comments here are aimed at the typical pleasure boat battery banks consisting of a few 6 volt or 12 volt batteries.
Large battery banks as found in commercial vessels are a different critter - but not by much.
Anyway, here I am speaking to golf cart batteries or the typical Group 21 through 31 that we see in our vessels.
Lost in the fumes from the bubbling batteries is the fact that the float voltage is too high - way too high.
At 13.2 to 13.6 volts the cells are still bubbling. Leave the battery on float long enough and it will run out of water.
The float voltage should not be higher than 12.75-12.80 volts.(This is called a battery maintainer)
Your method of cycling the charger once a week is a vast improvement over leaving them at float voltage 24/7.
But (there is always a but) with these 3 stage marine chargers intermittent charge cycling causes the evil equalizing charge to raise its head.
Every time the marine chargers I have used go into a charge cycle, they finish it off with an equalizing charge - 1 to 4 hours of too much voltage into a fully charged battery causing it to bubble like cheap champagne. So, if you do something to pull the battery down in the morning and cycle the charger on, the charger will recharge and then go through 4 hours of bubbling. If you do something in the afternoon to again pull the battery down enough to trip the charger on, guess what? Another additional 4 hours of bubbling.
And there goes your water.
Now, there is a need for an equalizing charge, perhaps once every 25 to 50 charging cycles - or twice a year on lightly used batteries. Not every time.
I have had this discussion with three well known manufacturers of marine chargers and I might as well have talked to the wall. The equalizing charge is a religion for them.
So, what's a fella to do?
Well, for batteries left on float in the off season, using a timer to turn the charger on once a week is excellent.
Even better is to limit the time the charger is on so that it is not going through a 4 hour equalizing charge every time it cycles and bubbling the batteries.
An hour of charge would be more than enough since idle batteries do not drop appreciably and will recharge within minutes. Consider the remainder of that hour to be your equalizing charge.
Another method would be to clip a battery maintainer across the main terminals and leave it on - do not bother with turning on the charger if you do this.
Desulphators I do not have an opinion on. I have actually built a couple of them and fooled around with trying to recover weak batteries. I do not use them any more. My suspicion is that a stored battery on a battery maintainer has more than enough electrons jiggling back and forth on the surface of the plates to discourage growth of sulphate crystals. The desulphators probably do no harm. ymmv, sar, bni
denny / k8do
Became involved with batteries at a professional level when I was 19. Now these were fleets of 4000 pound monsters, but they were still just batteries.
So, I have opinions - hoo boy, do I.
My comments here are aimed at the typical pleasure boat battery banks consisting of a few 6 volt or 12 volt batteries.
Large battery banks as found in commercial vessels are a different critter - but not by much.
Anyway, here I am speaking to golf cart batteries or the typical Group 21 through 31 that we see in our vessels.
Lost in the fumes from the bubbling batteries is the fact that the float voltage is too high - way too high.
At 13.2 to 13.6 volts the cells are still bubbling. Leave the battery on float long enough and it will run out of water.
The float voltage should not be higher than 12.75-12.80 volts.(This is called a battery maintainer)
Your method of cycling the charger once a week is a vast improvement over leaving them at float voltage 24/7.
But (there is always a but) with these 3 stage marine chargers intermittent charge cycling causes the evil equalizing charge to raise its head.
Every time the marine chargers I have used go into a charge cycle, they finish it off with an equalizing charge - 1 to 4 hours of too much voltage into a fully charged battery causing it to bubble like cheap champagne. So, if you do something to pull the battery down in the morning and cycle the charger on, the charger will recharge and then go through 4 hours of bubbling. If you do something in the afternoon to again pull the battery down enough to trip the charger on, guess what? Another additional 4 hours of bubbling.
And there goes your water.
Now, there is a need for an equalizing charge, perhaps once every 25 to 50 charging cycles - or twice a year on lightly used batteries. Not every time.
I have had this discussion with three well known manufacturers of marine chargers and I might as well have talked to the wall. The equalizing charge is a religion for them.
So, what's a fella to do?
Well, for batteries left on float in the off season, using a timer to turn the charger on once a week is excellent.
Even better is to limit the time the charger is on so that it is not going through a 4 hour equalizing charge every time it cycles and bubbling the batteries.
An hour of charge would be more than enough since idle batteries do not drop appreciably and will recharge within minutes. Consider the remainder of that hour to be your equalizing charge.
Another method would be to clip a battery maintainer across the main terminals and leave it on - do not bother with turning on the charger if you do this.
Desulphators I do not have an opinion on. I have actually built a couple of them and fooled around with trying to recover weak batteries. I do not use them any more. My suspicion is that a stored battery on a battery maintainer has more than enough electrons jiggling back and forth on the surface of the plates to discourage growth of sulphate crystals. The desulphators probably do no harm. ymmv, sar, bni
denny / k8do