jimbaerselman
Well-Known Member
I appreciate that.
As I understand Megapulse is claimed to work by providing a high frequency pulsing at the 'the natural frequency of the battery', whatever that means. I assume it means lots of tiny high voltage pulses - and since it doesn't heat the battery (at those mA it couldn't!) it's obvious that those pulses are of a very short duration compared to the 'non-pulse' periods.
I believe the actual battery charging for megapulse is done from an additional source. though that may not be necessary for your tiny torch battery.
Incidentally, I think (this is memory again, fallible stuff!) that the Sterling de-sulphating cycle is a 16v steady voltage of relatively short duration - tens of minutes - cut off using time or a battery temperature sensor, whichever shouts first.
The battery manufacturers do not say that megapulse doesn't work, but they are skeptical that it has any advantage over standard, high voltage techniques for de-sulphation.
As I understand Megapulse is claimed to work by providing a high frequency pulsing at the 'the natural frequency of the battery', whatever that means. I assume it means lots of tiny high voltage pulses - and since it doesn't heat the battery (at those mA it couldn't!) it's obvious that those pulses are of a very short duration compared to the 'non-pulse' periods.
I believe the actual battery charging for megapulse is done from an additional source. though that may not be necessary for your tiny torch battery.
Incidentally, I think (this is memory again, fallible stuff!) that the Sterling de-sulphating cycle is a 16v steady voltage of relatively short duration - tens of minutes - cut off using time or a battery temperature sensor, whichever shouts first.
The battery manufacturers do not say that megapulse doesn't work, but they are skeptical that it has any advantage over standard, high voltage techniques for de-sulphation.