Sep-18-2013 07:39 PM
Nov-22-2013 08:00 AM
Rodallg wrote:What are you using to charge the battery? Is it a small float charger? Manual car charger 6+ amps? Or a 3 stage smart charger? How long are you charging it for? How do you know when it is fully charged? You should let it sit overnight before taking voltage readings. By waiting several hrs like you stated you are just reading a surface charge. If you disconnect your neg cable or install a disconnect on the neg cable you should be able to last several months without recharging on a fully charged battery. I have an older MH also with a 7 year old Walmart battery and have a .4 amp draw without disconnecting the battery. A 2.5 year old battery should still be good unless it was severely undercharged for that period. I would get the 40 amp B&D or Stanley smart car charger if you don't have one already and fully charge it, then run the equalize function. Hope this helps.
Any comments?
Nov-22-2013 07:22 AM
Nov-22-2013 05:21 AM
Nov-18-2013 10:01 AM
Sep-22-2013 04:36 AM
Sep-22-2013 04:33 AM
Sep-22-2013 02:03 AM
Rodallg wrote:
Yes I meant "12" and not "2", I took it to walmart and had them test it. They said it was good, they charged it to 12.58 vdc and the CCA of 775 out of 850. I can't believe it is good though. I installed it back into the MH for and checked the draw again and was still at less than .9 milli amp, so in the next week I expect it to be low again.
Sep-21-2013 03:23 PM
Kaz wrote:Rodallg wrote:
Thank you for the help.
I brought the battery home and put it on the charger, disconnected at full charge (I believe it was in the 2.6 range), checked it 24 hours later and it is now measuring 2.40. is the .2+ drop an acceptable drop? The battery is from Walmart, I guess I could have them check it but I don't want another Walmart battery.
You're saying "2.6" and "2.4," but I assume you mean 12.6 and 12.4? If that's right, then no, something is wrong. I don't have my tables with me, but I think 12.4 volts is about 25% discharged, which shouldn't happen overnight. Sounds to me like the battery is defective.
Skip
Sep-21-2013 12:14 PM
Rodallg wrote:
Thank you for the help.
I brought the battery home and put it on the charger, disconnected at full charge (I believe it was in the 2.6 range), checked it 24 hours later and it is now measuring 2.40. is the .2+ drop an acceptable drop? The battery is from Walmart, I guess I could have them check it but I don't want another Walmart battery.
Sep-20-2013 07:03 AM
Kaz wrote:Rodallg wrote:
Checked my chassis battery 1 week ago and it was at 12.17 vdc (with the neg. lead disconnected), today I checked and it was at 11.88. Is this an expected drop? Battery is 2.5 years old. I checked the amp draw and it measured 0.10 on the 10amp scale. I brought it home and put it on a charger and try measuring it again. Last resort was to take it somewhere and have it tested.
Any thoughts?
It's kind of an art form to measuring state of charge with a voltmeter (dissipating surface charge and all that), but I agree: Something's up. A fully charged battery (after a rest period) should be around 12.65 volts, so you were only about 50% charged when you started. Maybe the battery was not recently charged, or it's not holding a full charge.
But even still, it shouldn't drop that much in a week. 11.88 volts is essentially 100% discharged. 100 mA is slightly high for a parasitic load, but not that high. Of course, measuring on the 10 amp scale is pretty rough for the mA range -- you probably want to get a reading on the mA scale, but still... something's not right.
I guess I'd do two things. First, disconnect all loads, fully charge the battery, let it sit for 24 hours, put a small load on it for 5 or 10 minutes, wait for a few minutes, and then check the voltage. It should be 12.65 or thereabouts. And, if you can, use a hygrometer to check the specific gravity of each cell. Each should be about 1.265.
Assuming that checks out, leave the battery disconnected and check it again in a week. It shouldn't change.
Then, assuming you've got a good battery, I guess the problem is the parasitic drain. Technically, anything less than 100mA is OK, but really it should be down in the 35-50 mA range (or less). What I've done for other folks looking for similar problems is to suggest putting a meter on the battery (like you've done), and then pull fuses one-by-one looking for the one that eliminates the drain. You might find something like a TV antenna amp switch left on.
If none of that works, then ... hmmm ... don't know. Let us know and we'll figure out the next step.
Good luck,
Skip
Sep-20-2013 02:06 AM
Rodallg wrote:
Checked my chassis battery 1 week ago and it was at 12.17 vdc (with the neg. lead disconnected), today I checked and it was at 11.88. Is this an expected drop? Battery is 2.5 years old. I checked the amp draw and it measured 0.10 on the 10amp scale. I brought it home and put it on a charger and try measuring it again. Last resort was to take it somewhere and have it tested.
Any thoughts?
Sep-19-2013 05:34 AM
dons2346 wrote:It was in series from the negative cable to the battery.
Even with a battery disconnect, there are still phantom loads present. CO detector, LP, the disconnect relay, etc. The only way to truly disconnect a battery is to lift a lead from the battery. I had the neg. lead disconnected and it dropped the amount in my original post.
Even then a battery can self discharge 2% a month.
How could you check amp draw if it is disconnected?
Sep-19-2013 01:27 AM
Sep-18-2013 08:37 PM