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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2012 4:54 am    Post subject: Charger needed to revive 18 aH Lead   Acid Batteries | 
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				At 06:22 PM 8/29/2012, you wrote:
  <rparigor(at)suffolk.lib.ny.us>
 
 Hi Group
 
 I have a task to try and revive some 18 aH 12 volt sealed AGM 
 batteries that weigh in at ~ 14.5 pounds.
 
 The charger that was being used on them begins at a 3.5aH charger, 
 then slows down a bit and peaks ~ 14.2/3 then goes to 13.7 float.
 
 After a while, I don't know if from letting discharge too much or for 
 too long, or the 3.5 aH is a bit too fast, but what happens is the 
 batteries although they peak and go to float, they really don't take 
 too much of a charge and have a very low capacity.
 
    How long does the charger stay in a top-off mode? 3.5
    amps charge is okay. But the absorption charge should
    sustain at 14.7 or so until the charge acceptance current
    of the battery is 100 mA or less.
 
 http://tinyurl.com/9s7kpww
 
 I have a 900mA Yuasa motorcycle charger, that does a little better.
 
 Now what I did find works really well, is using the fool cheapest of 
 cheap battery chargers I gave away with the 9aH batteries I sold on 
 AeroElectric.
 
    Do you have a way to measure and plot the performance
    of your charger. Also a way to measure real capacity
    as a result of that charging protocol? One of these
    West Mountain Radio analyzers can be used to both plot
    charger performance -AND- confirm the battery's acceptance
    of charge.
 
 That charger is nothing more than a 500mA transformer that supplies a 
 constant 500mA current, then the circuit just looks for 15.4/5 and 
 turns off. Now mind you it can take not hours, but days to reach that 
 magic 15.4/5 number, and some batteries can not be revived, but most 
 can. Then I found that if I take two of these batteries and parallel 
 them and let the poor 500mA charger reach 15.4/5, it gets about as 
 good as it gets so far.
 
    Yes, the higher trip point is well into the range
    recommended for absorption charging . . . perhaps
    a bit high but certainly high enough.
 
 I think that the longer elevated voltage is perhaps desulfating??
 
    Don't know if it's a sulfation problem at all,
    just a quirk of the chemistry. Those two batteries
    I bought from you have been subjected to a couple
    of charge/discharge cycles using just a Battery
    Tender and they seem to be taking on a full load
    of watt-seconds.
 
    Just for grins, I'll do a cap-check on one and then
    do a manual, constant current charge that guarantees
    sufficient dwell at absorption voltages and repeat the
    cap-check.
 
    There's a number of exemplar smart-charger profiles at:
 
 http://tinyurl.com/9t6t8x8
 
    in particular, take a look at this curve plotted on
    a Schumacher 1562A
 
 http://tinyurl.com/945zdog
 
    it seems to be doing the right things in accordance
    with contemporary wisdom
 
    The Battery Tender Jr has the right moves too,
    but not as defined. That's what I use to charge
    and maintain a stack of test batteries here in
    my shop.
 
    Battery Minders behaved like this when I
    tested them
 
 http://tinyurl.com/9paguuy
 
    Little or no absorption dwell, very low end
    of charge trip point. I used to have a couple
    but after doing these tests, I relegated them
    to maintaining a fully charged battery only.
    Gave them away to family members for keep batteries
    in garden tractors and seldom used vehicles topped
    off . . . but cautioned against expectations for
    getting the battery up to 100%. It would probably
    pump it up to a value that would start the engine.
    Once the lawn was mowed, the machine's normal recharging
    protocols would probably top off the battery where
    the Battery Minder would be useful for maintaining
    that condition.
 
 I have a constant current 2 aH charger, and if I let it go much over 
 14.4 the batteries make a minor bubbling noise that I don't like too 
 much and figure if I let it go it will begin venting? I let it go 2 
 hours but the 500mA charge brought back more capacity.
 
 Sorry for the long winded explain, what I need:
 
 I need a consistent source for a fairly inexpensive charger that can 
 help revive these batteries.
 
 I looked at Walmart, they have a 1.5 amp charger that peaks too low.
 
    Is this the 1562 or it's offspring? I'm surprised
    that it wouldn't behave much as the version I
    tested some years ago. Schumacher is the BigDaddy
    of battery charging tools. If anyone should know
    how to do it right, it should be them.
 
    I'll do a looksee to find out if the Battery Tender
    falls short of top-off when used as a stand-alone
    charger-maintainer.
 
    I thought the short answer to your question would
    be to pick up a Schumacher 1562 or current
    replacement at Walmart. Do you have one of these
    in hand? You could mail it to me and I can run some
    plots on it.
    Bob . . .
 
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		rparigoris
 
 
  Joined: 24 Nov 2009 Posts: 808
 
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				 Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2012 9:16 am    Post subject: Re: Charger needed to revive 18 aH Lead   Acid Batteries | 
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				Hi Bob
 
 Thx. for the reply.
 
 The chargers being used are Chargetek 3 stage chargers:
 http://www.chargetek.com/resources/battery-charger-basics/
 
 I didn't measure it, but the link says it turns off at between 1/100C and 1/50C, so on a 17aH battery that is between 170 and 340mAs.
 
 What is the amp draw that you need to drop below for the Schumacher 1562A to drop out of absorption rate and go to float with a 17aH battery?
 
 If it's 100mAs or less that may just be the ticket to success.
 
 Is there a way to adjust this point to allow it to stay in absorb for a longer time?
 
 Thx.
 Ron Parigoris
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2012 12:32 pm    Post subject: Charger needed to revive 18 aH Lead   Acid Batteries | 
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				At 12:16 PM 8/30/2012, you wrote:
  <rparigor(at)suffolk.lib.ny.us>
 
 Hi Bob
 
 Thx. for the reply.
 
 The chargers being used are Chargetek 3 stage chargers:
 http://www.chargetek.com/resources/battery-charger-basics/
 
 I didn't measure it, but the link says it turns off at between 1/100C 
 and 1/50C, so on a 17aH battery that is between 170 and 340mAs.
          Hmmmm . . . okay. I seem to recall that Skip
          Koss talked about recharge currents below 100
          mA for terminating an absorption cycle on really
          big batteries like the 30-50 a.h. aircraft batteries
          we used at HBC. Kicking off that high seems a
          bit 'light'.
 What is the amp draw that you need to drop below for the Schumacher 
 1562A to drop out of absorption rate and go to float with a 17aH battery?
 
          Have no idea. Never measured it. Don't know how
          critical it is. Given that the Schumacher product
          stayed in a absorption mode for a significant time
          suggested that a righteous absorption charge was
          being delivered. I don't have any 1562's around
          to measure. I could put one of your Chargetek
          machines on a DAS and find out where they are
          calibrated.
 
 If it's 100mAs or less that may just be the ticket to success.
 
          Yes.
 
          Just for grins, I took one of the 12a.h. batteries I
          bought from you that has been on a Battery Tender
          for the last several days (green light on, in maintenance
          mode. Fooey, didn't read the float voltage first) and
          hooked it to a 14.6v power supply. Charge current jumped
          to 300mA and over the next 12 minutes it fell to 100mA.
          Putting a crayon to the numbers suggests that the battery
          is 12 a.h. x 12v x 3600 s/hr ~ 500,000 watt-seconds
          at full charge. The little boost on the bench put in 200
          mA average for 12 min for 0.2 x 14 x 720 ~ 2000 watt-seconds
          or less than 0.5% of capacity. Hence I deduce (1) that the
          Battery Tender did indeed return and support this battery
         to 100% of rated capacity and (2) an end of absorption cycle
          value of 100mA is not an unreasonable calibration point.
 
          It would be interesting to plot an absorption cycle for
          energy the battery takes on after recharge current drops
          below 300mA . . . I'm guessing that it's probably less than
          1% of rated capacity . . . but don't know without measuring.
 
 Is there a way to adjust this point to allow it to stay in absorb for 
 a longer time?
 
          Haven't had a 1562 (or replacement) apart to find out.
          But even if the EOAC termination value is higher, I'm
          not convinced that you're going to loose much. We could
          set up the experiment and find out.
    Bob . . .
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2012 8:12 am    Post subject: Charger needed to revive 18 aH Lead   Acid Batteries | 
				     | 
			 
			
				
  | 
			 
			
				At 06:22 PM 8/29/2012, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 <rparigor(at)suffolk.lib.ny.us>
 
 Hi Group
 
 I have a task to try and revive some 18 aH 12 volt sealed AGM 
 batteries that weigh in at ~ 14.5 pounds.
 
 The charger that was being used on them begins at a 3.5aH charger, 
 then slows down a bit and peaks ~ 14.2/3 then goes to 13.7 float.
 
 | 	  
          Pursuing another train of thought: It is
          possible that the batteries have suffered
          so degradation of performance due to combinations
          of age, conditions of storage, or even manufacturing
          quality.
 
          Skip Koss has related Concorde's techniques for
          recovering what appears to be a totally trashed
          battery. The process includes things like application
          of 24v on a 12v battery until recharge currents
          rise above some established value followed by
          a couple deep charge/discharge cycles. He
          said this process may well flog the horse back
          to some demonstration of life . . . but you
          never get back to 100% even if the battery
          is young.
 
          There's a mil-spec requirement for being able
          to recover a badly discharged battery . . .
          like a dead-short on it for a week before
          the recovery process is applied. Capacity
          tests measure proportion of chemistry still
          active . . . and there are some failures that
          cannot be recovered with outside stimulus.
 
          Bob . . .
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  After a while, I don't know if from letting discharge too much or 
 for too long, or the 3.5 aH is a bit too fast, but what happens is 
 the batteries although they peak and go to float, they really don't 
 take too much of a charge and have a very low capacity.
 
 I have a 900mA Yuasa motorcycle charger, that does a little better.
 
 Now what I did find works really well, is using the fool cheapest of 
 cheap battery chargers I gave away with the 9aH batteries I sold on 
 AeroElestric.
 
 That charger is nothing more than a 500mA transformer that supplies 
 a constant 500mA current, then the circuit just looks for 15.4/5 and 
 turns off. Now mind you it can take not hours, but days to reach 
 that magic 15.4/5 number, and some batteries can not be revived, but 
 most can. Then I found that if I take two of these batteries and 
 parallel them and let the poor 500mA charger reach 15.4/5, it gets 
 about as good as it gets so far.
 
 I think that the longer elevated voltage is perhaps desulfating??
 
 I have a constant current 2 aH charger, and if I let it go much over 
 14.4 the batteries make a minor bubbling noise that I don't like too 
 much and figure if I let it go it will begin venting? I let it go 2 
 hours but the 500mA charge brought back more capacity.
 
 Sorry for the long winded explain, what I need:
 
 I need a consistent source for a fairly inexpensive charger that can 
 help revive these batteries.
 
 I looked at Walmart, they have a 1.5 amp charger that peaks too low.
 
 Any ideas?
 
 Thanking you in advance
 Ron Parigoris
 
 
 Read this topic online here:
 
 http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=382105#382105
 
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 | 	  
 
    Bob . . .
 
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