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El 10-05-13 15:26, Tom escribió:
Hi again Sorry, I know I asked this question a couple years ago or a similiar one. I am stumbled again and I don't want to ruin my batteries so I thought I would ask the pros again. I have two Marine deep cycle 750 A Nautaulis Canadian Tire Batteries. 225min/115 ah model number is 10-3199-0. These are the bit bigger batteries about 40 lbs. I also have the 10am/2am Automatic Canadian Tire 11-1567-0 battery charger. I have had these batteries in my garage all winter and about once every month or 50 days I would bring them up to full charge. Takes about 25 or 30 hours at 10 amp charging until that GREEN light comes on and automatically shutting off. My problem is now that the green light isn't coming on. They are just sitting there bubbling away, I actually had to put about a litre or two into each of Reverse Osmosis water in to them because I could see they were low. But the green light will not come on and they keep charging. About 3 days now. I took both batteries down to Canadian Tire and the chap used a little hand tool electronic device that pumped me out a receipt thing (EXP800) and this battery test told me that the batteries are GOOD. Voltage is 12.63 for one and the other was 12.68 for the other. They measured 922 CCA and 684 CCA (both rated for 750A) so he said they are good. Temp was 19C I asked him why the green light doesn't come on and the charging stop but he said because the batteries are fully charged and good that the charger must be good. And it is good because I used it on another deep cycle battery I have and the green light came on and it stopped when fullly charged. I see the needle is close to the green on the meter but just not moving over and continues charging at 10 amps with the bigger batteries in question. Batteries are almost 4 years old. Any ideas or comments? Should I stop the charging? or continue until that green light comes on like it used to? I would like to get a few more years from these batteries . All coments are appreciated, cheap or otherwise, I appreciate your expertise very much. Sorry the question is OFF Topic, but I know you folks have the answer better than the boating groups. thnx Best regards and thanks 73s Hello Tom, Can you measure the voltage when the charger is charging the batteries (after charging your full batteries for an hour or more)? When it reads 14.8V, your charger is only generating gas and you are reducing the service life of the battery (and you need to add demi water). You may also measure the battery open load voltage after leaving it some days without any load (no charger connected). When it reads the values you mentioned (12.68V), there is no leakage in one of the cells and the battery is fully charged. I have no idea about the charge modes of your charger, maybe some voltage or current setting changed over time. For example when the charging voltage drifts up during aging, the charge current remains relatively high so that the charger thinks it still needs charge. Some chargers have a current measurement. Once the current drops below a certain value, the charger changes to maintenance charge (that means it reduces the charge voltage to avoid/reduce gassing). -- Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl Please remove abc first in case of PM |
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