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Old 09-23-2008, 01:38 PM   #1 (permalink)
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parallel battery pack question

If I have a pack of a few 12Vs all in parallel and one of them is in bad condition compared to the other, what is the result? I believe this just limits the amount of maximum amperage pulled from the pack, right? How does this effect the battery life?

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Old 09-23-2008, 01:44 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Well, parallel batteries have the same voltage but divide the current. So, with one bad battery in the mix, the same current is divided among the good batteries. So, there is more current draw on the good batteries. So, shorter battery life..I think. Does that help?
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Old 09-23-2008, 08:39 PM   #3 (permalink)
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If they are balanced, you will be good, if there are strong/ weak ones, then you should charge them individually; at least occasionally.

I killed a few big deep cell marine batteries back in my monster stereo days.

I had 6000 watts (rated) running off an air cooled vw alternator, so I was very capable of having continuos discharge rates in excess of 100 amps with the engine running.
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Old 09-23-2008, 09:03 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Hey Tim,

What do you want to run so many 12V's for?

Planning for your wind generator, or is this for something automotive? (Alternator removal?)
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Old 09-23-2008, 10:32 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Either car or home. I've been advised it might be possible to pickup some cheap and used marine batteries by calling local boat shops. They obviously would vary in condition and I wanted to know how to deal with it.
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Old 09-24-2008, 06:46 AM   #6 (permalink)
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there are several ways a cell can fail. it can fail open circuit or it can short out. if it fails open circuit then that battery will stop and the others will have to take over as already mentioned.

if a cell shorts out then there will be an imballance and the other batteries will try to charge it and will most likely over charge it and cause damage (to the other cells in the week battery). also cells when they are damaged can show low voltage with out being shorted out so and imballance can happen like this too altough it is usually less critical because the damaged cells will usually rise back to normal voltage.
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Old 09-24-2008, 01:21 PM   #7 (permalink)
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Thanks for the answers guys.

To go along with this question, what is considered the max amperage you can pull from a battery? My thinking is that you'd have to have enough batteries in parallel if you wanted to run something that pulls a lot of power, even if it is only for a short time. Also, what is generally considered the max charging amps? I'm thinking lead acid here, nothing fancy.
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Old 09-24-2008, 03:05 PM   #8 (permalink)
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I have usually heard of capacity/10 equals max charging amps.

So, if you have a 100 AHr battery, don't charge it at a rate faster than 10 amps.

There are some fancier batteries that let you charge faster than that, but you are going to want a very high quality charger to do it.
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Old 09-24-2008, 03:17 PM   #9 (permalink)
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"To go along with this question, what is considered the max amperage you can pull from a battery? My thinking is that you'd have to have enough batteries in parallel if you wanted to run something that pulls a lot of power, even if it is only for a short time. Also, what is generally considered the max charging amps? I'm thinking lead acid here, nothing fancy."

Most full size batteries (like those in a full size car or pickup) can put out a great deal of amperage, even beyond their rating, the main issue is you loose a LOT of potential Ahrs when you draw current faster. Most branded batteries will state their cranking amps or their Amp Hours (deep cycle) Generally each full sized battery at a minimum will be able to safely put out 200amps, most are capable of 500 or even 1000amps. Again you loose a great deal of capacity when drawing at these rates.

As for charge rates you can charge at almost any rate but again there is a great deal of losses and much more wear on your battery when you do this. Generally if you have a battery of say 200 amp hours you could charge up to a rate of 20 amps without excessive wear or losses, most however stick to C/20 or about 10 amps for a 200ahr battery. Higher than that and you loose much more energy to heat and wear the battery faster. It is also much more difficult to determine state of charge when charging very rapidly and the likely hood of overcharging is very real.

An important note...
There are methods of equalizing or restoring battery capacity, I would recommend this before just using batteries in poor condition.

One method is to use a battery discharger (usually a 500amp is good) and recharge rapidly several times.

Another method is to drain some electrolite and add dissolved Epsom Salts (method can be found on the citicar yahoo group files area) This will dissolve the sulphation and increase the batteries ability to charge / discharge but also increases the internal self discharge rate.

Another method is to discharge the battery and use a pulse charger to recharge the battery several times. You can build a bedini battery charger to pulse (slow but easy) or you can build a faster 555 like they had in home power. Lead Acid Battery Desulfator
To revive your weak but functional batteries, there is also a paper floating around on battery building and repair (aka dissassembling and repairing lead acid batteries)

Good Luck

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