GaylesFaerie
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2020
- Messages
- 580
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-28
- Hull Identification Number
- FMLT2701D112
- Vessel Name
- Gayles Faerie
So I went down to the boat today (2012 R27) to do a battery check (add distilled water if needed and check specific gravity of each cell). This would be the 4th time since purchasing the boat last August to do an in depth status - I checked in December, in March, in June and today. This is what I found:
Failed Batterty: https://photos.app.goo.gl/3yu2ygimhUrPbBA87
Both caps blew off, a chunk of plastic over cell 3 blew out, the plastic covering cells 1 and 2 cracked and almost blew off, and the corner of cell 1 split down the side spilling the contents of cell 1 & 2. Upon closer inspection of the back of the battery another chunk of the casing blew off as well...
Corner: https://photos.app.goo.gl/MqPAFKy84tHQT3XX9
I read somewhere to keep baking soda on board for just such an occasion and sprinkled it about and over 40 minutes added about two full cups to cell 3 which still has all its solution...
Baking soda: https://photos.app.goo.gl/AYAayyKzrZ5xyHG9A Yes, I had double nitrile gloves on and protective eye wear during this process. After taking out the other 3 batteries, I removed the bad one and placed it on 4 sheets of oil absorbent padding, tied it up and got it off the boat.
I last drove the boat on Saturday and found this today (Thursday). I'm no electrical maven but (smarter people please correct me if I'm wrong) it looks like plates in cell 1 sulfated to such a degree as to burst the casing. Upon inspection of the other cells in the other 3 batteries as well as the 4 full cells in the damaged battery - they all had plenty of solution covering the plates.
I check my Victron monitor religiously and it always showed 100% SOC and 13+ Volts charging. I mostly spend time at the dock plugged into Shore Power with the ProNautic Battery Charger ON, and take occasional trips for a couple of hours and then return. No over-nighting on the hook. Hind site being 20/20 I did notice in the last two weeks that my solar monitor would read "Bulk" instead of the usual "Float". My panel is 100W and uses an MPPT regulator.
The batteries as recorded in the boat's log book were purchased in April of 2018 so they are just over 3 years old (I was planning on getting new ones in the Spring). They are wet flooded lead acid chemistry:
3 x Ultrapower EV27TM House 110 Ah (House batteries)
1 x Ultrapower 1027M Starter 1000 MCA
What might I have done to cause this or is this just plain luck?
Any suggestions on replacements? I'm planning on 4 new ones.
GF
Failed Batterty: https://photos.app.goo.gl/3yu2ygimhUrPbBA87
Both caps blew off, a chunk of plastic over cell 3 blew out, the plastic covering cells 1 and 2 cracked and almost blew off, and the corner of cell 1 split down the side spilling the contents of cell 1 & 2. Upon closer inspection of the back of the battery another chunk of the casing blew off as well...
Corner: https://photos.app.goo.gl/MqPAFKy84tHQT3XX9
I read somewhere to keep baking soda on board for just such an occasion and sprinkled it about and over 40 minutes added about two full cups to cell 3 which still has all its solution...
Baking soda: https://photos.app.goo.gl/AYAayyKzrZ5xyHG9A Yes, I had double nitrile gloves on and protective eye wear during this process. After taking out the other 3 batteries, I removed the bad one and placed it on 4 sheets of oil absorbent padding, tied it up and got it off the boat.
I last drove the boat on Saturday and found this today (Thursday). I'm no electrical maven but (smarter people please correct me if I'm wrong) it looks like plates in cell 1 sulfated to such a degree as to burst the casing. Upon inspection of the other cells in the other 3 batteries as well as the 4 full cells in the damaged battery - they all had plenty of solution covering the plates.
I check my Victron monitor religiously and it always showed 100% SOC and 13+ Volts charging. I mostly spend time at the dock plugged into Shore Power with the ProNautic Battery Charger ON, and take occasional trips for a couple of hours and then return. No over-nighting on the hook. Hind site being 20/20 I did notice in the last two weeks that my solar monitor would read "Bulk" instead of the usual "Float". My panel is 100W and uses an MPPT regulator.
The batteries as recorded in the boat's log book were purchased in April of 2018 so they are just over 3 years old (I was planning on getting new ones in the Spring). They are wet flooded lead acid chemistry:
3 x Ultrapower EV27TM House 110 Ah (House batteries)
1 x Ultrapower 1027M Starter 1000 MCA
What might I have done to cause this or is this just plain luck?
Any suggestions on replacements? I'm planning on 4 new ones.
GF