If you are like me you probably have old lead acid batteries sitting somewhere probably discharged
CAMEL Product Page
If you dont use lead acid battery always charge it before and recharge it every 3 monts
I ve tried this method on maintenance free lead acid, sealed lead acid and lead acid batteries , only difference is that maintenance free and SLA have hidden caps
Place paper towels on your working areas
Now if you have SLA or maintenance free battery you will need to remove lid with screwdriver
Put on gloves and remove caps
Do this in well ventilated area
Wipe any wet spots with a paper towel
Then look inside cells and you should see white fabric that is dry
If you see brown fabric with white lumps your battery is probably sulfated and your chance of reviving battery is really bad
Now you will need to connect your multimeter to show you how much battery is drawing
Related articles:If you are looking for more details, kindly visit flooded truck battery.
Set your multimeter to 10A and connect it in series with charger and battery
When you connect it to the battery an it should draw 100-200mA
Thats sign of dead battery
Set your psu to 14v or connect your charger and let it sit for day or two
After that your battery should draw 500-mA
Then just leave battery and calculate how long battery should charge
Ah capacity = Amps that your battery is drawing x hours
For my battery 8Ah = 0.39A x 20,5 h
At the time i wrote this instructable i was 15, i didn't have a lot of equipment at that time or knowledge. Over the years i gained a lot more experience with batteries and how electronic things work so i decided to test what i wrote 5 years ago.
I got 2 old batteries that my uncle used with portable speaker and both were dead (4.5V when measuring on terminals). I charged them up slowly and tried to discharge.
First battery only had 402mAh (same one i charged in https://www.instructables.com/id/Portable-Power-Supply/, it's about 4y old) which is way too low for 7Ah battery and second one got mAh which is kinda fine. I opened them up, instead of distilled water i used sulfuric acid that i got from old lead acid battery. I used pulse charger that i made and first battery didn't want to go over 10V which is clearly a sign of a bad cell. Second one was about 2 days on charger and when i tried discharging it i got mAh which was really good for 4y old SLA battery. Same pulse charger was used on starter battery from motorcycle (12V 3Ah) and after few charge/discharge cycles it was good enough to start engine and charge at decent rate.
I can't say that pulse chargers (or desulfators) work but in my experience they did help with two battery while i had no luck with third one. I also tried simple 12V transformer and bridge rectifier and i had no luck bringing that first battery to life, it simply got hot and voltage dropped even further down to 6V which is a sign that cells are most likely damaged.
Desulfator/Pulse charger is simple 555 timer with 1khz signal turning mosfet on and off (1ms turn on time) with about 18V pulses up to 10A.
TL:DR
Method shown in this instructable works but your result will vary a lot. You might have luck and restore your battery or it may be damaged way beyond repair. Pulse chargers may work but if your battery is beyond repair just get a new one (you will also get discount by returning old one when buying new). Capacity will also vary, some batteries might be close to original capacity but if plates or electrolyte are bad it will have low capacity.
If you want to learn more, please visit our website heavy truck battery.
Comments
0