full_mosey wrote:
pianotuna wrote:
Hi John,
I believe the most often quoted specification is one bubble per second breaking the surface of the electrolyte, for equalization.
I understand that!
Where I am not clear is how as little as one bubble per second has any relevance to charging as opposed to stirring.
Equalization is stirring, right?
My belief is that a temp-comp charger will not bubble your battery.
HTH;
John
Confusion here between de-stratification (stirring) and de-sulfation (charging)
All temp comp does is adjust the voltage to the temp. The voltage used remains the same "value" "Gassing voltage" for wets is 14.x so your temp comp will just make that voltage different. ( The temp may may also make the battery's gassing voltage different, so chicken and egg thing going?)
A way to de-stratify is to stir by charging at high voltage and cause bubbles which do the stirring. (Another way is physical agitation) However that stirring is not the objective of charging, but only a by-product. The bubbles can be the objective if the batteries are charged but stratified.
The charging desulfation is to return the sulfate to solution which takes higher voltage to keep the current flowing (the current does the charging) It happens that you get bubbles at those voltages, but getting bubbles is not the aim, getting more current is the aim.
So you get past "gassing voltage" but the bubbles are just an indicator you are up where you need to be for charging (your volt meter would tell you that too)
There is no "fine tuning" needed with Wets to get the most current with no bubbles yet (bubble threshold? :) ) AFAIK AGMs have more of a fine tuning charging voltage restriction spec so the gas can combine ok without out-gassing.