M
Mike Norton
Guest
I set it at two amperes charge rate, low-maintenance (gel cell or AGM).
These are separate settings. In many cases, I suspect you are correct about
not needing to be charged; at least, it does not overcharge it like the
WallWart charger does.
One time, after using the starter on a recalcitrant .91 for what seemed like
an hour, it took 2 hours to charge it.
"ehsjr" <ehsjr@bellatlantic.net> wrote in message
news:70Kve.3096$Bn6.997@trndny08...
These are separate settings. In many cases, I suspect you are correct about
not needing to be charged; at least, it does not overcharge it like the
WallWart charger does.
One time, after using the starter on a recalcitrant .91 for what seemed like
an hour, it took 2 hours to charge it.
"ehsjr" <ehsjr@bellatlantic.net> wrote in message
news:70Kve.3096$Bn6.997@trndny08...
Mike Norton wrote:
I bought a charger for 69 dollars from Sears. It charges anything that
is 12V lead acid under 200 AH, including small gel cells. You can
connect the battery up backwards with no harm to charger or battery. It
can also provide a 100A burst to help start an engine (car engine, that
is).
I have been charging 7AH gel cells with no problem after every use. It
normally takes less than a minute.
Something is very wrong.
A battery that charges in less than a minute either
did not need to be charged, was charged *WAY* too fast,
or wasn't really charged, due to the charger shutting
off when it shouldn't.
Check the instructions for your charger - is there something
different you need to do when charging gel cells vs car
batteries?
Ed
snip
-- Mike Norton