Plevier
Well-Known Member
Plevier, battery was on charge for some 12 hours yesterday. I checked voltage periodically (with charger running and connected to battery) and it was rock steady at 15.4 volts with ammeter on charger showing zero. Battery/charger are in the garage and battery is showing no signs of warming up at all which given earlier comments I am a little surprised at. At this stage I have no idea at all whether it has recovered. I will put it back on the car tomorrow, with the one fuse removed. I will then keep an eye on voltage (no plans to use it for a week or so) and possibly take it back to ATS and ask them to check it again. Whilst their Bosch tester may not be ideal it will give a me a better indication of where I stand than with my kit ( I do have a hydrometer but that's seen better days and as I said previously, battery is "sealed for life" so I will need to carefully ease (break) the top off to even get to the electrolyte.
Thanks for your thoughts and Happy Christmas by the way.
I don't think that's a good sign if you were getting negligible current at 15.4V.
Bit puzzling really. It would suggest the battery is completely utterly dead, probably from being left 100% discharged for quite a long time, but you say (I think) that's not the case.
If you can get some life out of it, then at that voltage it should definitely pass some significant current. Stuck/duff ammeter?
Was it gassing? Even if you couldn't see, you would hear it fizzing quietly with ear against case. If so, there was some current.
Even 12 hrs at that voltage wouldn't lose a lot of water, electrolysis takes a lot of energy. (of course if you genuinely have no current, then no water loss regardless of voltage!)
At least you know you don't have internal shorting - unless the ammeter is stuck/duff.
As annageek said, you'll really only resolve this by a capacity test at 5A current. Difficult to do accurately but you can get an idea with a 60W headlamp bulb, discharging down to 10.5V under load.
Must recharge immediately of course.
PS You call the battery "sealed for life". I take it you mean a "sealed maintenance free" type with liquid electrolyte in, not "sealed lead acid" i.e. AGM/gel/VRLA. If it is actually the latter then there is little you can do.