โOct-28-2020 01:35 PM
โOct-30-2020 05:38 PM
opnspaces wrote:
Did you check the water level in the batteries while you had them disconnected? My guess is the exploded one had a low cell and the charging made it spark internally.
โOct-30-2020 12:59 PM
โOct-30-2020 10:40 AM
Grit dog wrote:Matt_Colie wrote:
I am a small boat sailor and a licensed ship's engineer that retired and has been doing work on other people's boats for most of the last twenty years. Most now have a house bank that is a pair of GC2s (golf kart batteries). Some still have pairs of 12V jars. I have seen and cleaned up after many more battery explosions that were pairs of 12V jars. If you believe the convenience of two 12V is worth it, carry backing soda on hand as a precaution.
Matt
So a 12V has some inherent propensity to explode that a 6V doesnโt??
Roflmao
โOct-30-2020 08:14 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:
I am a small boat sailor and a licensed ship's engineer that retired and has been doing work on other people's boats for most of the last twenty years. Most now have a house bank that is a pair of GC2s (golf kart batteries). Some still have pairs of 12V jars. I have seen and cleaned up after many more battery explosions that were pairs of 12V jars. If you believe the convenience of two 12V is worth it, carry backing soda on hand as a precaution.
Matt
โOct-30-2020 07:30 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:
I am... I have seen and cleaned up after many more battery explosions that were pairs of 12V jars. If you believe the convenience of two 12V is worth it, carry backing soda on hand as a precaution.
Matt
โOct-29-2020 05:32 PM
โOct-29-2020 04:58 PM
โOct-29-2020 04:33 PM
โOct-29-2020 01:18 PM
CA Traveler wrote:
Shorted cell - boom!
Replace the other battery also. Might be educational to have it load tested but it's toast.
โOct-29-2020 10:18 AM
โOct-29-2020 09:58 AM
โOct-28-2020 10:28 PM
โOct-28-2020 06:02 PM
โOct-28-2020 03:51 PM