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Is flooded equalization charge always timed?

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
I have (2) of the 6v interstate costco batteries. Would like to do an equalization charge on them. Using the Trojan users guide for directions.

Trojan is saying to equalize for 2-4 hours. But it also says to test specific gravity every hour and stop charging when the SG no longer rises.

Im using a charger designed more for the RC hobby. (icharger 308duo) It has a Pb mode, and i just figured out a way to trick it into charging at 16.17v by telling the charger its a 7cell 14 volt battery and adjust the volt per cell spec to 2.31v.

I seems to work. Within a couple minutes i noticed a smell and could hear the batteries boiling. Stopped and will move them outside before ever doing that again. Theyre currently in the garage with just a side door open.

The charger does have the option to stop charging when the charge current falls to a certain percentage of the set charge current.

I watched the charger and it went up to about 13amps and fell to around 9 within the first 3 minutes.

What is the correct procedure.
1. Start 16.2v constant voltage charge.
2. After 1 hour STOP the charge.....wait a couple minutes???....then test specific gravity? Trojan doesnt actually say to disconnect the charger before testing.

Or since the batteries are only 7 months old should i do a 1 hour equalization charge and call it good? (seems like a lot of people on here mention doing a 1 hour equalization charge once a month)

Or....can you stop equalizing when the charge current falls to a certain percentage of C20? Which might correlate to when the specific gravity stops rising.

Suppose i could test all that myself by recording charge current and testing SG. After a few times i might recognize a pattern. For example maybe specific gravity stops rising when the charger falls to 4amps on a 210ah battery. So end charge current could be set to 2 percent.

Whole reason for asking is to keep the hydrometer use to a minimum and to keep the equalization charge time to minimum.

Thanks for any advice!!
33 REPLIES 33

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
Yeah mex bubbling a little too much. I see black splatter spots on the cardboard under the batts. Could also see it splattering up while taking measurements.

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
I'm not too sure the SG was done increasing. Was closing in on 4 hours and my chicka brought home a new puppy. Been playing with him all night. I think I read trojan saying to perform their eq charge and repeat again at another time after 4 hours.

Looking at my notes the weak cells were at 1.291 at 3h 30m and when I checked again at 3h 55m I saw close to the same.

Batteries are label 2/19 and maybe have 10 cycles on them.

Trojan says max capacity doesnt happen until 50-100 cycles is the reason I'm playing around with them in the garage. We don't get out camping as much as we would like.

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
When I wrote BUBBLING it was not a miscue. Acid can either be in the plates or in solution.

BFL13
Explorer II
Explorer II
My 6s and T-1275s had SG near 1.3 when truly full when they were in good shape, before they got old and tired. So you already proved you don't need to worry about the exact battery voltage wrt the charger voltage--you got the SG where it belongs doing whatever you did.

You can try all sorts of ways, but all that matters in the end is that SG. One case where the end does justify the means? The proof is in the pudding? Whatever works?
1. 1991 Oakland 28DB Class C
on Ford E350-460-7.5 Gas EFI
Photo in Profile
2. 1991 Bighorn 9.5ft Truck Camper on 2003 Chev 2500HD 6.0 Gas
See Profile for Electronic set-ups for 1. and 2.

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
Im down for pretty much anything. Original plan was to set the charger to 11a and do the 5% charge. With the voltage limit at 16.2v but i was going to watch it and not let it go above 16.0v.

Clicked start and it was up at 16.1x after a minute so i modified the amperage down lower.

I like following recipes. Get a nice baseline before playing with the rules through experience and knowledge like landyacht.

That voltage drop is still messing with my brain. If the recipe calls for 16.0v, shouldnt i ignore what the charger screen says and go with the battery voltage at the terminals? (i guess im gonna keep asking until someone says yes!?!?)

I do see how the voltage drop becomes less as the charging amps decrease. But it appears the charging amps stayed up around 6a and that turned into about 1.5-1.8v difference between the batteries and my charger screen.

It took just under 4 hours. They stopped around 1.290. Took in a total of 24000mah.

They definitely bubbled more than the 1 bubble per second. So maybe i was too high throughout the entire eq charge.

landyacht318
Explorer
Explorer
While following a recipe perfectly is of course ideal, often ideal cannot be easily achieved. The goal of EQing a battery is maximum specific gravity with minimal acceptable abuse.

I can get batteries there without following the recipe exactly, I just did so yesterday on what 'might' be the exact same batteries as Wopachop, and these batteries will get drained to 10.5v as they work for a living and their owner simply don't shiv a git. His converter is an Iota dls-45 I installed some 5 years ago. I tell him to plug in for 3 days after an outing then hit the disconnect I added. The interstate gc2s are 3 years old and yesterday was their first watering afaik, and their second EQ besides when i first got them.

The screwy31 has been walking dead for year and years now, often ignored, and still going. The concrete under it is surrounded by a dam of baking soda and chewed away inside that barrier. I bring it up as an example that perfection of process can be skewed pretty heavily, and still yield more than acceptable results.

I took the screwy31 out of my rig in june of 2015, and it mostly sees a 100 watt south facing panel daily and charge controller that attempts to achieve absorption voltage for 2 hours a day. It provides upto 30Ah nightly 5 days a week.

Its charge efficiency factor is horrible, but solar is free, so i dont care.
It's self discharge is likely 2% a day or higher. also not a factor.

It got some attention yesterday only as I had my meanwell unscrewed from my rig's electrical cabinet door and a 2/3rds a gallon of distilled handy.

When it becomes a 10.5v battery, I'll likely core charge it toward a new high $$ AGM, and my equal aged and impressive Northstar-27 AGM will assume its place in workshop duty even if it is still a viable dual purpose cycler and engine starter at that time.

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
Landy this is a recipe. I would LOVE a six-minute cake, however...

I tried 16.2 with a GOOD flooded battery 16.0 yielded the least unneeded temperature gain and gassing. The tops of the batteries stayed drier. After a nine-hours demanded equalization at 16.2 volts, change, to rubber galoshes rubber apron, and biohazard helmet.

The tests were conducted on nearly new flooded batteries ๐Ÿ™‚ not The Walking Dead.

Trojan can stuff carbon into a 31 but this is not the norm for a flooded 31 RV battery. ๐Ÿ™‚ You did not misidentify your Screwy 31. Kudos!

BFL13
Explorer II
Explorer II
"Got them charging now this is fun. "

Oh-oh. The bug has bitten! ๐Ÿ™‚
1. 1991 Oakland 28DB Class C
on Ford E350-460-7.5 Gas EFI
Photo in Profile
2. 1991 Bighorn 9.5ft Truck Camper on 2003 Chev 2500HD 6.0 Gas
See Profile for Electronic set-ups for 1. and 2.

landyacht318
Explorer
Explorer
I found on one screwy battery that what took close to 4 hours at 15.5v took 45 minutes at 16.2v.

45 minutes was more desirable, for me.

1.283 might be as high as it goes.

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
Prefer your slightly lower voltage and increased needed time. Don't bake a cake at 2000 F for four minutes. Don't tinker this is a recipe ๐Ÿ™‚

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
Got them charging now this is fun. The 5% charge shot them to 16.2 after a minute. Lowered to 8amps and then 6amps. Weakest cell started at 64 and is now at 80 after 2 hours.

I bumped it to 6.5a which makes the charger say 16.20 volts. But down at the terminals its only 15.94v.

When a place like Trojan is doing all their tests. Wouldnt they have a voltage meter attached direct to the terminals? So when they recommend a 16.2v equalization charge. That would mean at the battery itself?

The SG is rising slow. I had the charger showing 16.00v for about an hour and the SG stayed at 1.274. I turned it up a bit to make the charger show 16.20v and then the SG rose up to 1.282 and 1.280 on diff cell.

Makes me think i could crank the amps a little higher until i see 16.15 or 16.2v down at the battery and get the SG to rise and finish so i could end the equalization charge.

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
Flash the idiot charger with a six-volt battery. Or use a Meanwell or Megawatt. Smart chargers have the IQ of a three-toed tree sloth.

Send your child to school until they master a pictogram cash register keyboard then send them to burger-flipper university to memorize the annunciators for the different apparatus.

BFL13
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have the manual adjustable PowerMax converter, so I do it for ambient.

Here is an old thread on all this which has the temp comp table I use (I printed it) thanks to Mark there.

https://www.rv.net/forum/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/26669731/srt/pa/pging/1/page/2.cfm


I don't take battery temp which will be higher than ambient once charging gets going. I suppose that battery temp being higher will somewhat compensate for the battery voltage being less than the charger's set voltage. IMO it doesn't matter to such accuracy in real life, and while camping you can't create lab conditions.

I just set the charger voltage at the specified Vabs (adjusted for temp) and that's that. Can't do anything about the battery voltage. It rises all the way through till full. It does not get to the charger setting until the end. Doing a 50-90 it is not there at 90, but is still a bit lower than charger voltage.

EDIT--BTW, with an adjustable voltage charger, you have to set the voltage before connecting to the battery. Once connected, the voltage seen at the charger terminals is lower, due to "middling" with the battery voltage.

With a charger that has an external pot knob, you can set a few common voltages and mark the casing around the knob. Now you can leave the charger connected to the battery and use your marks for setting the voltage.

1. 1991 Oakland 28DB Class C
on Ford E350-460-7.5 Gas EFI
Photo in Profile
2. 1991 Bighorn 9.5ft Truck Camper on 2003 Chev 2500HD 6.0 Gas
See Profile for Electronic set-ups for 1. and 2.

pianotuna
Nomad II
Nomad II
Charge for 168 hours at 13.6. Now set the charging voltage for 14.4 for the future.

wopachop wrote:
Darn this charger wont begin charging if no battery is detected.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.