alanch
Well-Known Member
Count me as one to keep the charger on. In 11 years I have always kept the charger on. Haven't replaced a battery for 7 years, and I do not monitor usage. Just switch it on and go. No worries - touch wood!
It's not crystal clear what's best in this situation.
I certainly agree with switching the charger off when the batteries are fully charged and are totally isolated and the boat is being left.
However in your case the batteries are not isolated and are discharging - I don't know by how much in a week.
The charger's switching to float does not mean that the batteries are fully charged; it just means it has reached a state where further charging at the higher voltage will produce gas and heat but only a slow increase in state of charge, hardly any quicker than at a lower voltage (with a floor of 13.8V below which you will maintain state of charge, offsetting self discharge, but won't go to full charge.) I don't know the switching criteria that this particular charger uses, but commonly it equates to 80-90% SoC.
Reaching really full charge at 13.8V takes many hours.
So you are actually ensuring that your batteries are never fully charged.
What battery capacity do you have and how much does the a/f take?
I have seen a few references suggesting that either frequent shallow cycling or a bit of AC on the float voltage are good things.......
Do you have any references for your first suggestion about frequent shallow discharges? It's certainly not an idea that had any acceptance in the years I was in the battery manufacturing industry, but ideas can change.
I have seen a few references suggesting that either frequent shallow cycling or a bit of AC on the float voltage are good things.
google is not finding them for me today though!
Here is one article:
http://canadus.com/battery-basics-sulfation/
""There are many causes of sulfation, including acid stratification, excessive battery discharge, chronic undercharging, infrequent use, and leaving batteries (even new batteries) in a discharged state for extended periods of time. Subjecting batteries to extended periods of float charging also creates ‘dendritic’ sulfation.
Over time, and without exception, sulfation will reduce the performance and life of every lead-acid battery.""
I've heard others say some batteries are subject to being 'killed by kindness', ie being put on a float charger all winter for a motorbike battery.
Being a bit careful with the cash, I only have one float charger and move it around various batteries. My main bike battery is now in either its fourth or fifth summer, when many people expect to buy a new one yearly. It's a big bike and a little battery.
But it is a Yuasa.
Do you have any views on Desulfators, or even De-sulphators?
I have seen a few references suggesting that either frequent shallow cycling or a bit of AC on the float voltage are good things.
google is not finding them for me today though!
Here is one article:
http://canadus.com/battery-basics-sulfation/
""There are many causes of sulfation, including acid stratification, excessive battery discharge, chronic undercharging, infrequent use, and leaving batteries (even new batteries) in a discharged state for extended periods of time. Subjecting batteries to extended periods of float charging also creates ‘dendritic’ sulfation.
Over time, and without exception, sulfation will reduce the performance and life of every lead-acid battery.""
I've heard others say some batteries are subject to being 'killed by kindness', ie being put on a float charger all winter for a motorbike battery.
Being a bit careful with the cash, I only have one float charger and move it around various batteries. My main bike battery is now in either its fourth or fifth summer, when many people expect to buy a new one yearly. It's a big bike and a little battery.
But it is a Yuasa.
Do you have any views on Desulfators, or even De-sulphators?
When fully charged, and on float, a tiny tiny discharge, keeps them happy as long as it is followed by a re-charge.
## but no discharge will keep them even happier!
My experience is that so called de-sulphators are worthless (as in they do not work).
## we'll agree on that
charging a sulphated battery in paralled with a good one VERY slowly (tiny amps) , then discharging a little but at high amps (20 amps) to expand and contract the plates and crack the sulphation so normal chemistry can resume and the sulphate is attacked and turned back into decent chemicals.
## there are many "folk remedies" but that's one I've not heard; what do you believe the parallel good battery achieves, and what do you think the effect is on the good one? How do you achieve the tiny amps - constant voltage charge or constant current? - and what do you call tiny? Expanding and contracting the plates is what happens in every discharge cycle and is why cycling shortens the life. it cracks the active material away from the grid. Sulphation generally forms on the surface and in the mass of the plate AFAIK, not at the paste:grid interface. So I'm rather dubious about this technique (but haven't anything better to offer).
It worked with an Optima battery that a mate allowed to drop to 0 Volts and left like that for months and junked. The same Optima now works really well and a drop tester shows it as almost 1000 CCA. And for the first time ever I own a £180 battery.
## Optima batteries do seem to be remarkably tolerant (like the original Gates Cyclons where this technology was developed but is now out of patent) but boy the price!!.
....
6 Yuasa batteries are good but not special. An Exide for example should be just as good. There are plenty of rubbish ones around too of course.
For the size that fits my bike, the Yuasa has a significantly higher CCA rating, compared to the Exide.
315AH house batteries and 105AH engine battery. All fully charged after three days on shore power before I left. The A/F is low powered. I don't know how much it draws but the ammeter barely shows any consumption when everything else is turned off. On turning on the charger it will firstly show 30 amps being delivered on boost charge at 14.4 volts, but the amperage rapidly drops because the batteries are charged and the charger switches to its second phase of charging at 13.4 volts with the amps supplied continuing to decline as the batteries become "full", then it will drop down to float mode at about one amp. All this will happen well within the time that the charger is switched on by the timer, which is actually just over 5 hours as I use a mechanical timer with 14 on/off segments per day, and have three segments pressed in. (24/14x3=5.1429)
The bike is only 1 litre, but 118bhp, being started by 14Ah IIRC. That's 500cc of big bore piston at 11 to 1 or something.Well that's a double edged sword. It almost certainly means the Yuasa has more but thinner plates which is better for CCA but not as good for corrosion life (or cycle life but that probably isn't relevant here.)
If you really need all the starting amps you can get, then the Yuasa is the better battery for you.
If you have more CCA than you need, then the lower rated Exide might last longer.
I used to use an Exide motorcycle battery - 24Ah nominal I think, a big BMW fitment - to start a 100HP 3.3L Continental engine in a plane, it coped with that!
The bike is only 1 litre, but 118bhp, being started by 14Ah IIRC. That's 500cc of big bore piston at 11 to 1 or something.
My old bike, a Guzzi, took a car battery intended for a BL mini.
315AH house batteries and 105AH engine battery. All fully charged after three days on shore power before I left. The A/F is low powered. I don't know how much it draws but the ammeter barely shows any consumption when everything else is turned off. On turning on the charger it will firstly show 30 amps being delivered on boost charge at 14.4 volts, but the amperage rapidly drops because the batteries are charged and the charger switches to its second phase of charging at 13.4 volts with the amps supplied continuing to decline as the batteries become "full", then it will drop down to float mode at about one amp. All this will happen well within the time that the charger is switched on by the timer, which is actually just over 5 hours as I use a mechanical timer with 14 on/off segments per day, and have three segments pressed in. (24/14x3=5.1429)
... continuing to decline as the batteries become "full", then it will drop down to float mode at about one amp.
One Amp is a pretty high current for a charge that has switched into float mode and is trickle charging your batteries. The old kaput batteries that came with the boat used to take that much on trickle charge, but they really were kaput. The new batteries, now 6 years old, take <0.1A. That's the current into two in parallel.
Plevier, Yes they are Jaycar kits (two of them) The thread with the most views on the PBO forum is this one, which I started. http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?258391-Building-the-Ultrasonic-Antifouling-Kit-from-Jaycar I did consider using a mains PSU and have one that might do the job, from an old jump starter, but I would need to remember to switch them from mains to battery and back again. I did note that the last time I left the batteries off charge for 3 days whilst sailing, including one night with the anchor light on, plus internal LED lighting use and water pump use, with only a short amount of engine run time the battery charger settled into float mode within an hour of connection. You may be correct on Jaycar consumption but even if the house batteries are 25% discharged before recharging I reckon they will not come to any harm and I would rather do that than leave them on constant float charge, though I have noticed that the Sterling charger switches itself completely off from time to time. I really must re-read its manual.
The reason I don't like leaving a charger permanently on, is that the only boat fire in the marina in recent years was caused by a charger.
Yes can still do a quick check on what my appliances are using in just a few minutes with charger off.