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#1
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wrote I was wanting to use the marine battery I have but someone else posted a negative experience with the fumes ruining part of their house and their own health. It scared me a little. Starting with a new battery, I have used a 12v marine deep-cell with small float-charger to power a 25w VHF transceiver for over two years. For short periods, this will handle 100w xmit on an HF rig that draws 20-30amp. When a charger is connected to a battery, adequate ventilation must be provided, and the smoking lamp is "out". There is nothing wrong with using an emergency backup battery as part of normal (indoor) operations. It will provide hundreds of hours of monitoring and several minutes of low-power transmit w/o requiring a charge. Jack Painter Virginia Beach, Virginia |
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#2
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Jack Painter wrote: wrote I was wanting to use the marine battery I have but someone else posted a negative experience with the fumes ruining part of their house and their own health. It scared me a little. Starting with a new battery, I have used a 12v marine deep-cell with small float-charger to power a 25w VHF transceiver for over two years. For short periods, this will handle 100w xmit on an HF rig that draws 20-30amp. When a charger is connected to a battery, adequate ventilation must be provided, and the smoking lamp is "out". There is nothing wrong with using an emergency backup battery as part of normal (indoor) operations. It will provide hundreds of hours of monitoring and several minutes of low-power transmit w/o requiring a charge. Jack Painter Virginia Beach, Virginia How do you "vent" a batter thay is constantly hooked up to a trickel charger? |
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#3
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wrote Jack Painter wrote: wrote I was wanting to use the marine battery I have but someone else posted a negative experience with the fumes ruining part of their house and their own health. It scared me a little. Starting with a new battery, I have used a 12v marine deep-cell with small float-charger to power a 25w VHF transceiver for over two years. For short periods, this will handle 100w xmit on an HF rig that draws 20-30amp. When a charger is connected to a battery, adequate ventilation must be provided, and the smoking lamp is "out". There is nothing wrong with using an emergency backup battery as part of normal (indoor) operations. It will provide hundreds of hours of monitoring and several minutes of low-power transmit w/o requiring a charge. Jack Painter Virginia Beach, Virginia How do you "vent" a batter thay is constantly hooked up to a trickel charger? First, mine is not constantly connected to the charger. When it is, I have a window open and a fan circulating air in the station. Battery vents in an automotive or outdoor environment often become sealed-shut. This is not the case with a clean battery used indoors-only. A very small amount of moisture is sometimes visible on the surface of the battery around the vents following use of a powerful charger. This has never been my experience from the trickle-charger, however. Keep the battery surfaces clean, verify that the vents exist, then leave them in their normal (not loosened) condition and all is well. Not all batteries are vented and I would avoid using any charger indoors in that situation. Jack |
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