awol
Well-Known Member
A sailor of my acquaintance (no, it wasn't me, honest!) had 2 flat batteries on his boat on the hard so went out and bought a cheapy charger. When he connected it, the clever wee thing flashed a light for "polarity error" so he swapped the leads round and left the thing connected until the charging lights went out. He did the same to the second battery. When he connected the batteries back to the boat all was well until he noticed a burning smell from the engine and he now has a fried alternator. Both batteries actually show >12.5v but with the poles reversed.
I didn't think it was possible, but my only explanation is that the totally flat (he admits to about 1v on the meter!) batteries somehow managed to produce a residual -ve charge sufficient to convince the charger that they were the wrong way round. Ah well, with a new alternator, 2 new batteries (and he doesn't know about the radio and instruments yet) to buy, it was an expensive cock-up, but he does drive a Merc ........
I didn't think it was possible, but my only explanation is that the totally flat (he admits to about 1v on the meter!) batteries somehow managed to produce a residual -ve charge sufficient to convince the charger that they were the wrong way round. Ah well, with a new alternator, 2 new batteries (and he doesn't know about the radio and instruments yet) to buy, it was an expensive cock-up, but he does drive a Merc ........