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Perce
Living on a boat, I deal with deep cycle batteries continually. EVERYTHING ABOARD runs off of my batteries and I take good care of them since I hate cold beer. (yes 12vdc refrigeration) The uncovered plates will have begun to oxidize as soon as exposed to air. The liklihood of being able to recover from that depends on how long they were uncovered. By the way, a "fully charged" 12vdc battery, when not connected to any load at all, and not charging, will read 12.6 volts. So reading higher as you stated is a positive indicator. When batteries are charged they are (or should be) put through three stages of charge: Bulk charge - where the battery accepts about 80~90% of it's capacity to charge. A lot of current can be put into the batteries through this charge. When bulk charging I see 50 amps or more. Absorbtion charge - topping up the battery until the voltage reaches around 14.1 volts. The amount of current put into the batteries tapers off during this charge as the voltage increases. Float charge - once FULL absorbtion voltage (14.1) is reached, the charger should drop the voltage back to around 13.25 or there abouts, and current is minimal (a couple of amps tops). That's the charge the keeps the battery topped up. The LED on the charger may be nothing more than a volt meter reading. There is no way to know what your charger is doing without the specs. Most lower cost chargers don't really do much but shut off at a pre-set voltage. Perhaps the LED indicates that the charger is off, and you can measure with a volt meter to see what point the charger shuts off and deteremine how it handles charging. Refer to the voltages above to see when it shuts off and that will give you a rough idea of what the charger does. As for your battery and it's possible damage: There are a few things that you can do. First, as already suggested, top up all cells and watch them as you charge the battery. If one cell tends to loose electrolyte much more quickly than the others, the cell is bad and the battery is toast. In simple terms (it's a bit more complicated than this) a cell that is bad will be shorted, and the short causes it to get hot, and that boils off the electrolyte. Similary, if one cell seems quite hot compared to others, the battery is toast. Pick up a hydrometer and check all cells with it after charging and letting it rest with no load for 15 minutes. Any LARGE differences after charging indicate that the battery is toast. If a cell reads partially charged and all others read charged, the cell is in trouble. If charging for a period of time (overnight) doesn't bring the battery up to an even charge on all cells (as measured with the hydrometer) after 15 minutes no charge, no load, then there is one last ditch effort you can take. You can equalize the battery. Basically the battery is significantly overcharged in an effort to redistribute the electrolyte and force the sulphur on the plates (called sulfation) back into the electrolyte. Typically, the voltage applied is about 16vdc, and the equalize is done over about 8 hours. The battery will bubble like mad so remove the caps to allow it to vent. It will give off explosive hydrogen gas, so no open flames...take all precautions to prevent explosion. And it will loose electrolyte so you'll need to top it up during the process. Since it is a high voltage charge, turn off or disconnect all loads. In my case I turn off all breakers, fridge, stereo, instruments, Han radio, everything that is powered is disconnected to prevent damage. If after a full equalize the battery cells differ substantially when measured with a hydrometer, the battery is history. I hope this helps. Bill Percival P. Cassidy wrote: I have a 115AH deep-cycle battery that I bought as a stand-by battery for my amateur radio station. It has been in a "battery box" on trickle-charge (using a charger with a "deep-cycle" setting) for most of the time since I bought it over a year ago, and it has been called on to supply power only a few times. Recently I noticed that the "fully charged" LED on the charger was not on and started investigating further. Having not encountered any batteries in the last few decades that have not been sealed and "maintenance free," I was surprised to find tiny print about checking the electrolyte level every 30 days -- but even then it took me a few minutes to figure out how to get access to the cells to check this. Anyway, when I removed the cunningly disguised covers, I found that the cells looked totally dry, and each took close to a pint of distilled water to bring the electrolyte level above the plates. The battery has now been on charge for about 20 hours at the charger's 12A setting, but most of the time the ammeter on the charger has shown only about 5A. The cells are all still gassing. Is this battery likely to come back to life again, or is it toast? Any remedial actions to take? Perce (This is my usenet alias. I *am* an FCC-licensed "ham," but my real name and callsign have no relevance to this question.) |
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