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El 11-05-13 12:47, Wimpie escribió:
El 10-05-13 20:30, Tom escribió: Hello Tom, Hi Wim THanks for the response Yes, great, I will make the measurement on the battery after one hour of charging (while charging it) at 10amps to see if it measures greater than 14.8 volts. That may answer my concern. If it remains under the 14.8v mark should I just keep it charging? Unless you always need a fully charged battery always, I would not leave it on the charger, as even at 14.8V there will be some gassing. The 14.8V is an average value. The exact value for long time charge maintenance is temperature dependent (high temperature needs lower voltage, and may vary a bit per battery type). Some batteries I had stated 14.4V at room temperature. You may contact the manufacturer regarding the optimum maintenance charge voltage. Using a low maximum charge voltage (for example 14.2V) results in longer time to reach 100%, or you don't reach 100% state of charge at all. My charger is the automatic style that shuts off when it knows the battery is fully charged. It has the meter on the front and always starts off near the red then goes through the yellow part of the meter then when in the green part of the meter it shuts off and the green light comes on. If left like this the charger will cycle back on after a while for very short time then off then on, etc etc, does that mean it is losing its charge just sitting there? Is that ok or the sign of a dead or dying battery? Recently it just doesn't shut off and stays charging. I will measure its voltage at this stage. I will also measure to see if it is holding the voltage after a few days of nothing. I have a digital volt meter and can measure that easily. Thanks Tom http://www.energymatters.com.au/rene...-discharge.php shows state of charge versus open circuit voltage for various lead batteries. You may know that if you don't use them, store your batteries at low temperature (reduces self-discharge, high humidity is fine) and check the open circuit voltage every few months. That gives you an idea of how fast they self-dicharge. For Batteries I don't use frequently I recharge them when state of charge will drop below 50..60% (when they drop below 12.3V I recharge them). Hello Tom, Some charge voltage numbers that I used in the past for standby charger design (I don't remember the source). This means the battery is on the charger every day, year after year. 2.26 to 2.31/cell at 20 degr. C, Correct with -2mV/K battery temperature. for a 12V battery: 13.56V to 13.86V I do remember that some batteries didn't reach 100% charge, but for many standby use applications, service life is more important then 100% state of charge. For overnight charging (if you want a 100% charged battery for sure in short time): 2.43 to 2.53/cell at 20 degr. C for a 12V battery: 14.58V to 15.18V When you apply such a voltage to the battery, the battery will bubble (as you noticed) and the battery will lose water and service life. -- Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl Please remove abc first in case of PM |
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