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In article , Mark
wrote: I have a back-UPS 400 with a useless gelcell. However, touching terminals of a fully charged and healthy gelcell to the battery leads causes mega amps to flow, so something is likely fried. Interestingly, the dead battery has about 10.5 volts on it, in-circuit, no current! This is the classic symptom of a 12-volt lead-acid battery with one cell shorted. Hooking a 12-volt battery to a 10-volt battery will draw lots of current, as observed. Replace the old gelcell battery with the new one; do not keep the old gelcell in the circuit. Joe Gwinn |
#2
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Um, I didn't make myself clear, I guess - I took the old one out,
clipped to the new one, instant heat. Big heat. I'm guessing that there's circuitry which avoids draining the (bad) low voltage one past a certain point. I'm also guessing that a fully charged battery (the one I tried to hook up) enables current flow, and that perhaps the input of the invertor section is shorted. I didn't feel like leaving a perfectly good 17A-hour battery to fry itself and the surrounding wires etc..... BUt thanks for the response / mark Joseph Gwinn wrote: In article , Mark wrote: I have a back-UPS 400 with a useless gelcell. However, touching terminals of a fully charged and healthy gelcell to the battery leads causes mega amps to flow, so something is likely fried. Interestingly, the dead battery has about 10.5 volts on it, in-circuit, no current! This is the classic symptom of a 12-volt lead-acid battery with one cell shorted. Hooking a 12-volt battery to a 10-volt battery will draw lots of current, as observed. Replace the old gelcell battery with the new one; do not keep the old gelcell in the circuit. Joe Gwinn |
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