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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home
generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks |
#2
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On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995
wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? Have not hrard of any issues with them - a lot of friends using them for years on their "toys" - and they won't boil batteries. Might have to put them in an enclosure of some sort - other than possibly marine chargers they ALL need protection, or they WILL fail. Generalky "the dumber the better" |
#3
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On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995
wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. Because far too many people want more power, quicker charging, AND cheaper pricing. Mfgrs overload power transistors, use the cheapest suppliers for everything, and have hacks design the circuits. Then these same people fail to hold the manufacturers to any warranty claims. "It was cheap and I tossed it; lesson learned." But they didn't learn it since they let the mfgr off without any angry feedback. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. Yeah, isn't that fun? I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. Build one into a Penguin case with weatherproof leads? The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Why not stick with what works? A portable solar panel is fairly cheap to put in the truck fulltime, then deploy it on the roof when it sits. Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. -- America rose from abnormal origins. The nation didn't grow organ- ically or gradually from indigenous tribes--like, say, the French or the Poles--but emerged out of courageous, conscious acts of will by Pilgrims and Patriots. --Michael Medved, Right Turns |
#4
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On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques
wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. -- America rose from abnormal origins. The nation didn't grow organ- ically or gradually from indigenous tribes--like, say, the French or the Poles--but emerged out of courageous, conscious acts of will by Pilgrims and Patriots. --Michael Medved, Right Turns |
#5
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Larry Jaques wrote:
On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. Build one into a Penguin case with weatherproof leads? I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. Put your favourite one under an upturned mortar trough for outdoor use. -- "I'm a doctor, not a mechanic." Dr Leonard McCoy "I'm a mechanic, not a doctor." Volker Borchert |
#6
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On 11/10/2017 09:20 PM, Clare Snyder wrote:
Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? Deltran Battery Tender? ? I have. Exactly the problems that ig described. All of them. Trash. |
#7
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 00:26:15 -0800, Víðópnir wrote:
On 11/10/2017 09:20 PM, Clare Snyder wrote: Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? Deltran Battery Tender? ? I have. Exactly the problems that ig described. All of them. Trash. I've had good luck with the little 800 mA potted Deltran, 1 outside on a rock. I have 3 in service, 1 failure in 5 years. I don't live in snow country. Pete Keillor |
#8
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On Nov 10, 2017, Ignoramus30995 wrote
(in ): I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks What you want does exist in the marine world. When boats are in storage (on a cradle in a boatyard or back years), people often use trickle chargers to keep the batires charged (and thus freeze-proof). These chargers are almost always used outdoors, and are powered by 115 Vac. Ask around your local boatyards for the best brands. And for the avoid-at-all-costs brands. Joe Gwinn |
#9
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"Ignoramus30995" wrote in
message ... Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I bought the Harbor Freight 99857 to install in my truck and was satisfied that it worked as intended, although I decided to use solar power instead so I can't tell you if it lasts outdoors. https://www.harborfreight.com/15-amp...ner-99857.html I personally like having voltmeters on batteries or easily connected to them so I can tell when they need attention. Cigarette lighter outlets and a meter like this work well. https://www.amazon.com/INNOVA-3721-B.../dp/B000EVWDU0 Charging everything on a schedule like the start of each month reduces the time power cords are out to trip on or damage. Old batteries need more frequent topping off to keep them from falling into the high resistance condition called sulfation. They also need an ammeter to show if they aren't accepting a charge despite apparently correct charger output voltage, which might be your real problem. A solar panel charger forces current at whatever voltage is necessary. The danger is their open circuit voltage 20V which could damage electronics if the battery refuses to accept charge current. I solve it by increasing the charge voltage above 15V from home-made adjustable linear regulator chargers with these meters. https://www.amazon.com/SMAKN-voltage...v+3.000A+meter "Lab" or "bench" adjustable power supplies will work if the user knows how. https://www.amazon.com/Best-Sellers-...rial/318022011 My 2x100W Grape Solar panels arrived and are producing 140W right now, 9AM EST, equal to or slightly more than the APC1400, this laptop, its 19" external monitor and the fridge consume on average, according to charge and discharge wattmeters. They are already at their rated MPP current with the sun only 15 degrees up. -jsw |
#10
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"Jim Wilkins" wrote in message
news ![]() "Ignoramus30995" wrote in message ... [Old batteries] also need an ammeter to show if they aren't accepting a charge despite apparently correct charger output voltage, which might be your real problem. A solar panel charger forces current at whatever voltage is necessary. The danger is their open circuit voltage 20V which could damage electronics if the battery refuses to accept charge current. This is the accepted reason why batteries fail: http://www.batteryrestoration.com/im...0Failure.pd f The symptom is increasing intenal resistance that eventually won't let the battery accept charging current at the usual float voltage. Increasing the voltage to 16 - 17V may force enough current in to begin slow recovery. The charger needs to limit the current which may otherwise rise quite high at 15V or above when the battery recovers. Pulse reconditioners automatically apply high enough voltage at limited current, though I'd rather watch the progress with a metered DC supply and adjust the charging current to a few percent of the Amp-hour rating of the battery I've made neighbors' "dead" batteries last for several more years that way, but they needed annoyingly frequent attention. Since I don't like trickle charger power cords lying around I check and top them off on a schedule. When old batteries reach that condition the trickle charger voltage doesn't tell you enough. I bought the HF carbon pile tester to measure how much starting current is really available. A cheaper fixed resistance load tester is nearly as good. -jsw |
#11
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On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques
wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. |
#12
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On 2017-11-11, Clare Snyder wrote:
On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? I had a Guest charger and it failed in a few years. This is what I am trying to replace right now./ Have not hrard of any issues with them - a lot of friends using them for years on their "toys" - and they won't boil batteries. Might have to put them in an enclosure of some sort - other than possibly marine chargers they ALL need protection, or they WILL fail. Generalky "the dumber the better" |
#13
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On 2017-11-11, V??????pnir wrote:
On 11/10/2017 09:20 PM, Clare Snyder wrote: Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? Deltran Battery Tender? ? I have. Exactly the problems that ig described. All of them. Trash. Also "smart" chargers, "genius" chargers, etc |
#14
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On 2017-11-11, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. Because far too many people want more power, quicker charging, AND cheaper pricing. Mfgrs overload power transistors, use the cheapest suppliers for everything, and have hacks design the circuits. Then these same people fail to hold the manufacturers to any warranty claims. "It was cheap and I tossed it; lesson learned." But they didn't learn it since they let the mfgr off without any angry feedback. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. Yeah, isn't that fun? I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. Build one into a Penguin case with weatherproof leads? The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Why not stick with what works? A portable solar panel is fairly cheap to put in the truck fulltime, then deploy it on the roof when it sits. This is what I will do, I will go with the Pulsetech solar charger. By the way, Pulsetech's 110v chargers get the same kinds of bad reviews like "failed in a year". i Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. |
#15
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 17:25:25 -0600, Ignoramus15309
wrote: On 2017-11-11, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. Because far too many people want more power, quicker charging, AND cheaper pricing. Mfgrs overload power transistors, use the cheapest suppliers for everything, and have hacks design the circuits. Then these same people fail to hold the manufacturers to any warranty claims. "It was cheap and I tossed it; lesson learned." But they didn't learn it since they let the mfgr off without any angry feedback. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. Yeah, isn't that fun? I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. Build one into a Penguin case with weatherproof leads? The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Why not stick with what works? A portable solar panel is fairly cheap to put in the truck fulltime, then deploy it on the roof when it sits. This is what I will do, I will go with the Pulsetech solar charger. By the way, Pulsetech's 110v chargers get the same kinds of bad reviews like "failed in a year". i Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I've got an old Canadian Tire charger I've had for decades, as well as a Shumaker smart charger I've had for at least 10years. It is a bit overly picky and accuses some good batteries of having a shorted cell when I know from there performance they definitely do not. I also have a Sears DieHard charger given to me by a friend when he accidently left it in the "boost" mode too long and totally fried the ammeter. I ordered a new one from a charger repair depot for something like $17 and now it is as good as new. I also have an assortment of 24 and 36 volt chargers floating around. The old ones seam to live forever, while the newer ones have a ways to go - - - - |
#16
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder
wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. -- America rose from abnormal origins. The nation didn't grow organ- ically or gradually from indigenous tribes--like, say, the French or the Poles--but emerged out of courageous, conscious acts of will by Pilgrims and Patriots. --Michael Medved, Right Turns |
#17
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 09:34:56 -0500, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: My 2x100W Grape Solar panels arrived and are producing 140W right now, 9AM EST, equal to or slightly more than the APC1400, this laptop, its 19" external monitor and the fridge consume on average, according to charge and discharge wattmeters. They are already at their rated MPP current with the sun only 15 degrees up. Congrats! They sound efficient at that angle. I bent up some replacement brackets (decided to raise the bottom 3" to get the proper tilt, so had to lengthen the top 6 with no metal stretcher at hand) for the solar panels yesterday and then spent far too long removing the scale from the damned things. Now to clean and cold-galv spray them. It's going to rain here all week, so get ready downstream, guys. -- America rose from abnormal origins. The nation didn't grow organ- ically or gradually from indigenous tribes--like, say, the French or the Poles--but emerged out of courageous, conscious acts of will by Pilgrims and Patriots. --Michael Medved, Right Turns |
#18
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 17:12:08 -0600, Ignoramus15309
wrote: On 2017-11-11, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? I had a Guest charger and it failed in a few years. This is what I am trying to replace right now./ Have not hrard of any issues with them - a lot of friends using them for years on their "toys" - and they won't boil batteries. Might have to put them in an enclosure of some sort - other than possibly marine chargers they ALL need protection, or they WILL fail. Generalky "the dumber the better" I lost some batteries to a Guest. Now my onboard charger is a Minn-Kota. 10A on 3 channels. It's worked well for about 6 years now, just replaced the start battery last year. |
#19
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"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 09:34:56 -0500, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: My 2x100W Grape Solar panels arrived and are producing 140W right now, 9AM EST, equal to or slightly more than the APC1400, this laptop, its 19" external monitor and the fridge consume on average, according to charge and discharge wattmeters. They are already at their rated MPP current with the sun only 15 degrees up. Congrats! They sound efficient at that angle. I'm impressed with how well they perform on a PWM controller, compared to the maximum 32W I got from an HF "45W" kit. I couldn't resist $1/Watt with free home delivery. Now I have more solar panels than good places to permanently mount them. Folding plastic sawhorses worked well enough for temporary use. At noon the wattmeter on the controller input peaked at 180W. It totaled 0.958 KWH from 8AM to 2PM when I stopped because the battery voltage was climbing into the gassing range. In another 1/2 hour they would have been shadowed by a tree anyway. My Windy Nation P20L PWM controller allows a higher equalizing voltage for 2 hours before limiting at 13.8V (or whatever you program) . For wet cells it goes to 14.6V, too much for indoors. I will retest with the battery type set to Gel which drops the 2 hour voltage limit to 14.2V where my batteries don't gas as much. A published threshold for concern is 14.3V. It's easy to see if they are or aren't fizzing or bubbling but difficult to measure the rate. At the APC1400's 13.6V default float setting there is virtually no bubbling, but the recharging rate is too low for daily cycling. -jsw |
#20
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On 11/11/2017 11:03 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. Glad to see Dual Pro on that list. A Dual Pro Sportsman Edition is the one that's been keeping my sump pump batteries happy for the last 5 years or so. They claim that series is "Fully Waterproof". I can't vouch for that since the whole purpose for mine is keeping water _out_ of my basement. -- Bob Nichols AT comcast.net I am "RNichols42" |
#21
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 17:17:12 -0600, Ignoramus15309
wrote: On 2017-11-11, V??????pnir wrote: On 11/10/2017 09:20 PM, Clare Snyder wrote: Have you used a genuine "battery tender" ? Deltran Battery Tender? ? I have. Exactly the problems that ig described. All of them. Trash. Also "smart" chargers, "genius" chargers, etc I have at least a dozen of these https://www.northerntool.com/shop/to...2201_200332201 maintaining my motorcycle battery and a collection of AGM traction batteries. These batteries are around 10 years old and still measure around 90% of rated capacity. With my motorcycle which sits in an open shed carport, I made the unit waterproof by putting it in a small bucket, then inverting a 5 gal bucket over the top. That one has been in service around 3 years. I just noticed that NT has a new and improved batteryMINDER https://www.northerntool.com/shop/to...9669_200589669 I just ordered one. We'll see how it differs for its predecessor. John John DeArmond http://www.neon-john.com http://www.tnduction.com Tellico Plains, Occupied TN See website for email address |
#22
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"Neon John" wrote in message
... I have at least a dozen of these https://www.northerntool.com/shop/to...2201_200332201 maintaining my motorcycle battery and a collection of AGM traction batteries. These batteries are around 10 years old and still measure around 90% of rated capacity. John John DeArmond How do you measure battery capacity? Has it ever successfully restored a sulphated battery? -jsw |
#23
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On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 09:05:14 -0500, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 09:34:56 -0500, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: My 2x100W Grape Solar panels arrived and are producing 140W right now, 9AM EST, equal to or slightly more than the APC1400, this laptop, its 19" external monitor and the fridge consume on average, according to charge and discharge wattmeters. They are already at their rated MPP current with the sun only 15 degrees up. Congrats! They sound efficient at that angle. I'm impressed with how well they perform on a PWM controller, compared to the maximum 32W I got from an HF "45W" kit. I couldn't resist $1/Watt with free home delivery. Now I have more solar panels than good places to permanently mount them. Folding plastic sawhorses worked well enough for temporary use. That's what I said when I saw the 1kw kit for $1115. Bits add another $850 to that by the time I'm done. At noon the wattmeter on the controller input peaked at 180W. It Are they tilted properly, or just flat? 180 is pretty nice, but... totaled 0.958 KWH from 8AM to 2PM when I stopped because the battery voltage was climbing into the gassing range. In another 1/2 hour they would have been shadowed by a tree anyway. "Where are my climbing boots and chainsaw?" My Windy Nation P20L PWM controller allows a higher equalizing voltage for 2 hours before limiting at 13.8V (or whatever you program) . For wet cells it goes to 14.6V, too much for indoors. I will retest with the battery type set to Gel which drops the 2 hour voltage limit to 14.2V where my batteries don't gas as much. A published threshold for concern is 14.3V. It's easy to see if they are or aren't fizzing or bubbling but difficult to measure the rate. At the APC1400's 13.6V default float setting there is virtually no bubbling, but the recharging rate is too low for daily cycling. Why is it inside, again? -- Shake off all the fears of servile prejudices, under which weak minds are servilely crouched. Fix reason firmly in her seat, and call on her tribunal for every fact, every opinion. Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear. -- Thomas Jefferson |
#24
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On 2017-11-12, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. I looked at Associated, their "maintainer" is made in China. |
#25
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Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 09:05:14 -0500, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: At noon the wattmeter on the controller input peaked at 180W. Are they tilted properly, or just flat? 180 is pretty nice, but... It's 90% of MPP for two 100W panels, on a PWM controller. I used my UT210E clamp-on to adjust them for the maximum current, though some misalignment didn't hurt much. I will retest with the battery type set to Gel which drops the 2 hour voltage limit to 14.2V where my batteries don't gas as much. A published threshold for concern is 14.3V. It's easy to see if they are or aren't fizzing or bubbling but difficult to measure the rate. At the APC1400's 13.6V default float setting there is virtually no bubbling, but the recharging rate is too low for daily cycling. Why is it inside, again? The high current, heavy cable parts are close to the load, which is the fridge and computer desk. The indoor layout makes sense for a closely watched experimental manual backup system but wouldn't for an automatic daily cycling one. Once I have a better idea of what I need and have space for I may move the batteries and a larger inverter into an outdoor enclosure, or change to AGMs or Lithium. At this point I hopefully know enough to be able to snap up good deals I may happen onto, like these Home Depot panels. -jsw |
#26
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Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 19:49:03 -0500, Clare Snyder
wrote: On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 17:25:25 -0600, Ignoramus15309 wrote: On 2017-11-11, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: I own a large amount of equipment, and some of it, such as my home generator, is supported by battery maintainers. Overall, reliability of those has been pitiful. They are sold by "features", "microprocessors", "smart charge modes", have numerous LED status lights, etc. Because far too many people want more power, quicker charging, AND cheaper pricing. Mfgrs overload power transistors, use the cheapest suppliers for everything, and have hacks design the circuits. Then these same people fail to hold the manufacturers to any warranty claims. "It was cheap and I tossed it; lesson learned." But they didn't learn it since they let the mfgr off without any angry feedback. The reality is that most of them fail in a year, often in moderately cold weather or for no reason at all. Some stop working, some display blinking lights and do not do their job, some drain batteries when they fail etc. Yeah, isn't that fun? I am personally not even asking for much, just a weatherproof device that keeps the battery mostly charged and not overcharged. Unfortunately, I have not been able to locate anything useful that could survive being out in the weather. Build one into a Penguin case with weatherproof leads? The one item that I had a lot of success with, is a solar battery charger that I use on my rough terrain crane, that one seems to be a champ and the crane is always charged. But the 110v devices are abysmal. Why not stick with what works? A portable solar panel is fairly cheap to put in the truck fulltime, then deploy it on the roof when it sits. This is what I will do, I will go with the Pulsetech solar charger. By the way, Pulsetech's 110v chargers get the same kinds of bad reviews like "failed in a year". i Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I've got an old Canadian Tire charger I've had for decades, as well as a Shumaker smart charger I've had for at least 10years. It is a bit overly picky and accuses some good batteries of having a shorted cell when I know from there performance they definitely do not. I also have a Sears DieHard charger given to me by a friend when he accidently left it in the "boost" mode too long and totally fried the ammeter. I ordered a new one from a charger repair depot for something like $17 and now it is as good as new. I also have an assortment of 24 and 36 volt chargers floating around. The old ones seam to live forever, while the newer ones have a ways to go - - - - https://www.ebay.com/sch/Chargers-In...ry+charger+12v --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#27
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Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 22:29:27 -0600, Ignoramus16514
wrote: On 2017-11-12, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. I looked at Associated, their "maintainer" is made in China. Their KS-401 was "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts". Hmmm... -- Shake off all the fears of servile prejudices, under which weak minds are servilely crouched. Fix reason firmly in her seat, and call on her tribunal for every fact, every opinion. Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear. -- Thomas Jefferson |
#28
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On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 10:49:53 -0800, Larry Jaques
wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 22:29:27 -0600, Ignoramus16514 wrote: On 2017-11-12, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. I looked at Associated, their "maintainer" is made in China. Their KS-401 was "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts". Hmmm... Given how few solid state components are made in the USA these days...it wouldnt be surprising if some of the stuff came from Asia. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#29
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On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 15:48:42 -0800, Gunner Asch
wrote: On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 10:49:53 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 22:29:27 -0600, Ignoramus16514 wrote: On 2017-11-12, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. I looked at Associated, their "maintainer" is made in China. Their KS-401 was "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts". Hmmm... Given how few solid state components are made in the USA these days...it wouldnt be surprising if some of the stuff came from Asia. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts" means they applied their label, printed in Mexico, an a Chinese Charger and put it in a box printed in India. |
#30
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On Wed, 15 Nov 2017 20:24:55 -0500, Clare Snyder
wrote: On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 15:48:42 -0800, Gunner Asch wrote: On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 10:49:53 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 22:29:27 -0600, Ignoramus16514 wrote: On 2017-11-12, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. I looked at Associated, their "maintainer" is made in China. Their KS-401 was "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts". Hmmm... Given how few solid state components are made in the USA these days...it wouldnt be surprising if some of the stuff came from Asia. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts" means they applied their label, printed in Mexico, an a Chinese Charger and put it in a box printed in India. It could indeed mean that. Is it that way for sure? You have proof? Gunner |
#31
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On Thu, 16 Nov 2017 02:09:29 -0800, Gunner Asch
wrote: On Wed, 15 Nov 2017 20:24:55 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 15:48:42 -0800, Gunner Asch wrote: On Tue, 14 Nov 2017 10:49:53 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sun, 12 Nov 2017 22:29:27 -0600, Ignoramus16514 wrote: On 2017-11-12, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sat, 11 Nov 2017 15:32:09 -0500, Clare Snyder wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 22:02:52 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 21:33:28 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Fri, 10 Nov 2017 20:56:07 -0600, Ignoramus30995 wrote: Would anyone recommend some weatherproof charger, the "dumber" and less sophisticated, the better. Thanks I'm still using my dad's old 5A un-weatherproof louvered metal box. I meant to add Schumacher Sure Fire 300, 3A, 6/12V from the '60s. Original clamps, cord, analog meter, and everything. Sadly, Shumacher has done like everyone else and gone to high feature low quality Chinese-built crap. Not quite everyone. Ig, maybe look for one of these? http://www.usamadeproducts.biz/elect...-chargers.html 4 left in the US. I looked at Associated, their "maintainer" is made in China. Their KS-401 was "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts". Hmmm... Given how few solid state components are made in the USA these days...it wouldnt be surprising if some of the stuff came from Asia. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus "MADE IN USA of US and Imported Parts" means they applied their label, printed in Mexico, an a Chinese Charger and put it in a box printed in India. It could indeed mean that. Is it that way for sure? You have proof? Gunner Nothing specific on that product - but that's about how loose the regulations are. |
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