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#1
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You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make em drink!
I had a neighbor once that didn't want to wear out his light bulbs, so he used a flashlight when he went from room to room. Light bulbs were 4/$1.00 Flashlight batteries were $.50 each. The amount of power a battery charger uses is insignificant - anyone so anal to think you will save money on your electric bill by not using a couple of watts of power during peak times is crazy. No I do not shut off the lights when I go from room to room. Most of my lights are florescent - a gift of working for a company that did retail remodeling of Lowes stores. The difference between leaving the light on vs turning it on and off and ruining the bulbs - if the period of time is less then 15 minutes - you do not save anything by turning the lights on and off.
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No Kings, no queens, no jacks, no long talking washer women... |
#2
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Wow, that is an odd neighborhood.
Costs of each kwh decreases by 50% (half) in my neck of the woods at evening time till morning light. 12 hours. So we do save money using high electrical consumers at night. It is not minimual, not to me anyway. I was wondering why you only get 4 years out of your deep cycle batteries, when I get at least 8 and you are giving me advice? I think you are just jumping at the chance to fling some mud at someone who is less knowledgable as yourself in electrical situations. Light bulbs, flashlights, horses to water, neighbors, again, you skirted right around the question. Thanks anyway,,, 73s "Channel Jumper" wrote in message ... You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make em drink! I had a neighbor once that didn't want to wear out his light bulbs, so he used a flashlight when he went from room to room. Light bulbs were 4/$1.00 Flashlight batteries were $.50 each. The amount of power a battery charger uses is insignificant - anyone so anal to think you will save money on your electric bill by not using a couple of watts of power during peak times is crazy. No I do not shut off the lights when I go from room to room. Most of my lights are florescent - a gift of working for a company that did retail remodeling of Lowes stores. The difference between leaving the light on vs turning it on and off and ruining the bulbs - if the period of time is less then 15 minutes - you do not save anything by turning the lights on and off. -- Channel Jumper |
#3
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You are a retard...
Sometimes a guy just has to cut a person loose when they just don't get it the first time...
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No Kings, no queens, no jacks, no long talking washer women... |
#4
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On Thu, 17 Jan 2013 19:45:32 -0500, "Tom" wrote:
I was wondering why you only get 4 years out of your deep cycle batteries, when I get at least 8 and you are giving me advice? I think you are just jumping at the chance to fling some mud at someone who is less knowledgable as yourself in electrical situations. Our radio club is currently at 35 years for our batteries. Previously, they were running a small telephone central office: http://www.LearnByDestroying.com/k6bj/K6BJ%20Repeater/Batteries.jpg By your logic, that makes me supremely knowledgable (about batteries at least) and only one step below a battery god. No compliments or praise for this feat of battery longevity please. I prefer burnt offerings and ocassional human sacrifice. Battery gods do not fling mud. We fling lightning bolts. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#5
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On Mon, 21 Jan 2013 20:38:32 +0000, Jim Higgins
wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2013 21:57:51 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Our radio club is currently at 35 years for our batteries. Previously, they were running a small telephone central office: http://www.LearnByDestroying.com/k6bj/K6BJ%20Repeater/Batteries.jpg They look like C&D type KCT-720. Yep. That's the model. http://www.cdtechno.com/product/vla/kct_kt.html The originally came from the Aptos central office. My guess(tm) is that they had about 6-8 years of operation at the CO before they were donate to the local radio club (K6BJ). The original pile was for 48VDC or 24 cells. The others were distributed in groups of 6 cells to other radio clubs operating emergency repeaters. One of the clubs managed to partially ruin theirs with a poor quality charger. Ours has done well mostly because of the quality charger (donated by West Marine). It's a 40A West Marine by Statpower/Xantrex charger: http://members.cruzio.com/~jeffl/k6bj/K6BJ%20Repeater/slides/40A%20battery%20charger.html Another reason it has survived is because I refused to allow anyone to run an "equalizing" charge. I'm a bit worried about temperature tracking as the charger and batteries are essentially in separate rooms. So far, no problems, but with the large thermal mass of the batteries, they're unlikely to track the ambient temperature. The charger does NOT have a remote temp sensor, and I don't want to mount anything that might corrode in the battery box. Incidentally, a real tragedy was this collection of fine cells: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/crud/battery-jv.jpg They were in good shape, but because there were only 4 of them, we would have needed to build a voltage booster to use them on 12VDC. We tried really hard to find two more cells, and gave up after about 8 years of searching. So, they went to the lead recyclers. Bummer. And they look to be in VERY good condition. No appreciable swelling or plate distortion and no appreciable sediment. We take good care of them. The photo is from 2003 when we let things slide a bit. Here's a better photo (showing the dried out electrolyte accumulation) also from 2003: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/crud/k6bj-batteries-02.jpg The club was lucky to find a ham locally that knows how to take care of big telco batteries. Much of the power wiring, interconnect straps, bolts, hardware, and washers were replaced after the picture was taken. I was at the site yesterday and could have taken a current picture. Maybe next week when I clean up my mess. Looks like the positive post seals are leaking a bit and cleaning up those areas (including removing and cleaning the connectors) and applying those oil soaked felt washers you can get in most auto stores would help a lot to prevent further corrosion of the connectors. Maybe just clean selected positive posts that seem to be leaking the worst. The battery box is excessively vented to the outside. That results in condensation inside the battery box, which is where most of the dried out puddles around the posts originated. Most of the acid came from various individuals that just had to unscrew everything dripping battery acid from the caps. That has been mostly cleaned up. There was a slight leak on one of the posts (I forgot which one), but I just smeared some grease around the post to keep it from spreading. I don't recall if we put greased felt washers on the wire end terminal. I think it's likely, but I'm not sure. I'll add it to the next preventive maintenance exercise. For sure keep the covers dry. We try, but the condensation doesn't make it easy. A few boxes of baking soda and rice soak up much of the moisture. If they were made before early 1978 I may have been the Process Engineer in the plant where they were made. I would guess(tm) that they were delivered to the CO in about 1982. No clue when they were actually made. We had the documentation and maintenance history on the batteries, but that disappeared in a misguided shack "cleanup". Argh. Thanks for the info. Please send me an email (address below) as I may want to bother you with battery maintenance questions in the future. I consider those batteries irreplaceable and the #1 asset of the radio club. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#6
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On 1/17/2013 6:45 PM, Tom wrote:
SNIP I was wondering why you only get 4 years out of your deep cycle batteries, when I get at least 8 and you are giving me advice? I think you are just jumping at the chance to fling some mud at someone who is less knowledgable as yourself in electrical situations. Light bulbs, flashlights, horses to water, neighbors, again, you skirted right around the question. Thanks anyway,,, 73s I buy used deep cycles at the 4 to 8 year point. But I buy really good ones. The 200AH I currently have in my van (180 watts of panels with an MPP charging system) are currently at 12.8 volts and haven't seen a charge for 3 months. That is as good as it gets. One is 9 years old and the other is 5. They are 2 AGM UPS batteries. One is a 67AH that costs about $300 new, and the other is 134AH that costs about $550 new. I got the 67 for free from a damaged shipment - bent terminals due to poor shipper handling, the receiver rejected the whole pallet, we got 12 of them for free. I paid $100 for the 4 year old one. They are from the same manufacturer and the same series. You get what you pay for. Just make sure the guy that pays for it is a business and that they regularly rotate out old batteries from their UPS's. tom K0TAR |
#7
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On 1/20/2013 7:10 PM, tom wrote:
I buy used deep cycles at the 4 to 8 year point. But I buy really good ones. The 200AH I currently have in my van (180 watts of panels with an MPP charging system) are currently at 12.8 volts and haven't seen a charge for 3 months. That is as good as it gets. One is 9 years old and the other is 5. They are 2 AGM UPS batteries. One is a 67AH that costs about $300 new, and the other is 134AH that costs about $550 new. I got the 67 for free from a damaged shipment - bent terminals due to poor shipper handling, the receiver rejected the whole pallet, we got 12 of them for free. I paid $100 for the 4 year old one. They are from the same manufacturer and the same series. You get what you pay for. Just make sure the guy that pays for it is a business and that they regularly rotate out old batteries from their UPS's. tom K0TAR Here are links to those 2 batteries. The *-270 link is the closest current battery to my 67AH. The *-475 is current. http://www.unitedpb.com/documents/cd...s%2012-270.pdf http://www.unitedpb.com/documents/cd...s%2012-475.pdf tom K0TAR |
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