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#2
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Seeeee,,, that's the problem y'all are having.y'all are getting too
fancy with high tech batteries and chargers and crap and y'all are getting more confused and discomboomberated minute by minute.Go to a Sears store and buy a deep cycle battery and a regular ordinary plain as the clay hills in Mississippi battery charger and be Happy.Skip that high technology crap! Stay with the old timey prooven technology. cuhulin |
#3
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I have the old Gates energy manual on SLA. You can float charge them
all day, all night, until the cows come home, and even then keep them on the float. In fact, the best thing to do for these batteries is to float them. [AS you probably know, the risk with the used batteries is they sat around too long. I check the no load voltage before buying.] Cyclic chargers will get you back up to full charge faster than a float. Eric F. Richards wrote: wrote: That is the usual street price. Fry's stocks the NP4-6, slightly larger, for $11.99. I still think the used data center batteries are the way to go. Higher capacity and about 20 cents on the dollar. You guys are really trying to complicate matters. Just hit the ham flea market and somebody will be selling these batteries. A bench supply should be about $20. No need for the cyclic charger. The bench supply will be linear, so it doesn't generate noise other than the usual diode on the mains. Agree with the batteries statement, but not with the charger statement. My 800 AH bank has been put together from pulls out of hospital equipment bought at hamfests. $20 for 80AH gel cells? Can't beat it with a stick. However, gel cells are delicate and should be handled carefully during charging -- delicate in that an improper charge will destroy them. I'd use a proper charger with temperature compensation rather than a bench supply -- I have an el-cheapo bench supply that wouldn't take kindly to the load a heavily discharged battery would put on it, anyway. Both my solar charge controller and my (almost never used) 120 VAC charger are PWM types that do a nice fast job of charging but know how to handle gel cells. Yodar wrote: YUASA NP3-6 6V 3.0Ah sealed rechargeable lead-acid battery. This is one of the most popular reliable 6V lead acid batteries around. This battery is found in all types of equipment. Rated 6V 3.0Ah, the batteries we have are new, full power units. They were to be installed into a product so the manufacturer placed 2 strips of "hook and loop" fastener material on one side, however this doesn't effect the battery and it probably could be peeled off (however the adhesive is strong). This battery sells elsewhere for up to $30 each. Remember these are original YUASA not "off brand" batteries! G15560 http://www.goldmine-elec-products.co...em=1&mite m=1 FWIW Yodar -- Eric F. Richards "Nature abhors a vacuum tube." -- Myron Glass, often attributed to J. R. Pierce, Bell Labs, c. 1940 |
#4
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Yep,keep on floatin them Bolts.
cuhulin |
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