Sulfation & Equalizing Batteries

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Feb 6, 1998
11,701
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
During the recent Webinar there were some questions around sulfation & equalizing batteries so I wanted to post some more information here.

What is "Equalizing" or a "Conditioning Charge"?

Equalization - A low current, high voltage controlled over charge of the battery.


Equalization or conditioning charges can help to:


* Balance the individual cells of a battery so that the voltages in each cell are closer to equal and the specific gravity is also closer equal across all cells.

* Reverse or help to shed the formation of hard lead sulfate on the and in the battery plates.

* Eliminate stratification effects where the acid concentration is weak on top and more concentrated down low in the battery.


Sulfation = Cancer of the Battery

Once the cancer has begun it is only a matter of time before the banks demise.



Equalization
= Chemotherapy:

While equalization can help it can lead to other damaging effects and should only be used when absolutely necessary. Equalization can lead to errosion of the positive and negative plates which also reduces battery life. It is best not to do it "automatically" or too often. Only equalize on an as needed basis and turn off any auto equalization functions, if you can..


When should I equalize?

* When specific gravity (SG) & open circuit voltage do not agree

* When SG across cells varies more than .030 (.050 difference is a bad battery)

* When an individual cell requires more or less water than the others

* When you notice capacity loss

* When your wet cell batteries have sat for 2+ months without a charge or 5+/- months for Lifeline AGM

* Do not over equalize

* Follow your manufacturers guide-lines for equalization

* Use a PROPER charger that has a dedicated equalization mode. This is CRITICAL. Cheap chargers and "equalization" are not like bread and butter they DO NOT go well together.

* Most good quality marine chargers will do a separate controlled equalization at 15.3 - 16.0 volts, and low current, around 1.5% to 3.5% of the battery capacity. Do not buy a charger that puts out a 16V non-adjustable equalization voltage if you have batteries that require a limit of 15.5V etc. etc.. When shopping for a charger look at the specs of your batteries and your charger.

* Many chargers, such as Xantrex, time out the equalization mode at 1 hour. Your batteries may require more equalization and this "time out" allows you to test SG/Voltage etc. and then re-equalize if necessary.


What is Sulfation?

Sulfation = The formation of hard lead sulfate crystals in and on the + & - plates of the battery that are difficult, if not impossible, to reconvert to active material.

* Sulfation happens most at below 100% state of charge. Keeping your batteries as full as you can, as often as you can, will help minimize the formation of lead sulfate.

* It begins as soft lead sulfate, and if charged regularly, it can be reconverted to active material thus preventing the damaging hard lead sulfate from forming.

* If left at states of charge below 100%, as happens with mooring sailed or cruised boats, charged only via an alternator, the sulfate crystals can harden, die (become non-active) and adhere into and onto the plates. This basically acts as an insulation layer limiting current from properly flowing into and out of the battery.


How do I know if my batteries are sulfated?


* Charging current may never drop below 2% of battery capacity in the time it should take for the battery to become fully charged.

* When batteries should be "full" they are still warm or hot to the touch.

* SG is low in all cells and they had been "on-charge" for a long while.

* When your batteries are known to be severely discharged, like 50% discharged, and your charging voltage rises to absorption level "quickly". When battery voltage rises quickly on a deeply depleted bank this is a sure sign of sulfation.

* If state of charge voltage readings and SG readings do not agree, after resting.

* If the absorption voltage is correct 14.4-14.6 roughly, and temp compensated, and the batteries are rapidly boiling to excess.

* Poor performance

* You look in the cells with a flashlight and can see a whitish fuzz adhered to the plates.



So what can equalization do for my batteries?

Below is an example of a Deka Dual Purpose Starting/Deep Cycle battery that had been used as a house bank battery. The battery was installed in July of 2007 and has a June 2007 date code. The battery had never been equalized and it's depth of discharges are unknown. It had been topped up with water and charged via an alternator and occasionally a shore charger. It was on a 25 foot boat with an outboard motor. This was a simple 1 hour 15.5V equalization with a current of 2.2A to 2.6A during the duration. It is my guess that if I perform a second equalization I can get that battery to test out at the manufacturers "spec" of 650 CCA.

These are the test certificates taken before a 1 hour controlled equalization, and after:




Some cautions around equalizing:

It is generally best to equalize one battery at a time, not the whole bank.

Fully charge the battery to full, then add distilled water, and recharge. Only after these steps is it safe to equalize. Do not add distilled water to a discharged battery only to a full one,unless the plates are exposed.

Do not leave batteries on an equalization charge unattended

Turn off ALL DC loads. Equalization voltages may be too high for some electronics and the loads can also interfere with the EQ voltage.

Wear safety goggles & gloves when working around batteries

DO NOT equalize GEL CELL or AGM batteries. The only known exception to this is Lifeline AGM's which you can equalize...


 

Gunni

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Mar 16, 2010
5,937
Beneteau 411 Oceanis Annapolis
While I'm currently using 2 4D flooded lead acid batteries I anticipate replacing them with AGM's next time around, but replacing my battery charger during lay-up this winter as part of a final upgrade to the DC system. So the new charger and monitoring system will need to be much more sophisticated than my OEM Sentry charger. It has been awhile since I shopped chargers - wondering if there is a good evaluation/comparison of marine chargers and features available? A remote monitoring capability is essential. We charge at the dock, and also have the charger wired into the genset circuit. So the charger is an essential system component.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,701
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
While I'm currently using 2 4D flooded lead acid batteries I anticipate replacing them with AGM's next time around, but replacing my battery charger during lay-up this winter as part of a final upgrade to the DC system. So the new charger and monitoring system will need to be much more sophisticated than my OEM Sentry charger. It has been awhile since I shopped chargers - wondering if there is a good evaluation/comparison of marine chargers and features available? A remote monitoring capability is essential. We charge at the dock, and also have the charger wired into the genset circuit. So the charger is an essential system component.

Keep in mind that if switching to AGM batteries the ONLY brand that can be conditioned or equalized are Lifeline. That being said Lifeline's instructions and parameters for equalizing are quite strict. They want a max voltage of 15.5V and to do this over an 8 hour period.

Interestingly enough the Xantrex chargers they sell on the Lifeline web site only equalize for one hour then time out, and do so at 16V. If you always equalize in cool temps you could make the 16V setting work but you'd need to re-start it 8 times with the Xantrex. So if you buy Lifeline's you might consider a charger that can run at 15.5V, especially if in a hot climate and can be programmed to run longer on an EQ cycle..

You ideally want a charger that can limit equalizing to 15.5v and one that can run for 8 hours, or be programmed to, IF buying Lifleline batteries.

If buying another brand of AGM or any GEL battery then this is a non issue because they can't be equalized.

Why do you want to switch to AGM?

You might consider the Sterling Pro-Charge Ultra Chargers.
 

Gunni

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Mar 16, 2010
5,937
Beneteau 411 Oceanis Annapolis
A Xantrex charger would not be my first choice. I have had terrible experiences with their customer service, and the last photovoltaic charge controller purchase had product quality issues. I will look at the Sterling charger.

The flood batteries have been good training batteries for my much customized DC system. But in a vehicle capable of rotating 90deg. with it's batteries below the waterline, they're not the best choice. The last thing I want to be dealing with after a broach is battery acid in the bilge, and chlorine gas bubbling out of the batteries.
 

Bob S

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Sep 27, 2007
1,797
Beneteau 393 New Bedford, MA
Just curious, I have not equalized my batteries before. I know I asked you a question on a post for solar chargers because I was looking at a Morningstar that had an equalization function. i take the batteries out and store them inside over the winter. What do you think of Battery Desulphators? I saw this
http://www.altestore.com/store/Deep...pulse-voltage-for-larger-battery-banks/p8505/

I just finished the third season on a pair of wet acid batteries. I have a Sears battery charger but it doesn't have an equalization function. Any recommended chargers that do?
 
Jul 1, 1998
3,062
Hunter Legend 35 Poulsbo/Semiahmoo WA
BatteryMINDer for desulfating and maintaining

For desulfating an old "no maintenance" Group 27 battery that was getting "tired" I got this BatteryMINDer based on doing some internet research. The battery is really old - I don't have the records handy but I'm guessing well over 10 to 12 years now. The battery seemed to have lost it's "umph" but after using this charger for a couple years it seems to have put a little life into the battery. Not like new but certainly better than it would have been.

This Model No. 12248 at http://www.batteryminders.com/batte...-8-Amp-Charger-Maintainer-Desulf-p-16133.html is the one I wound up getting. It's about 3 years old now and based on the above it seems to do the job they advertise.

What their claim to fame is, is a patented pinging system that spreads itself over a range of frequencies that knocks the sulfate off.

I've also used it on the golf-cart house banks and my F-150 pickup battery (don't drive the truck that much) so it gets moved around a lot. The golf-carts are going on 11 years old and it seems to have helped them too.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,701
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
Just curious, I have not equalized my batteries before. I know I asked you a question on a post for solar chargers because I was looking at a Morningstar that had an equalization function. i take the batteries out and store them inside over the winter. What do you think of Battery Desulphators? I saw this
http://www.altestore.com/store/Deep...pulse-voltage-for-larger-battery-banks/p8505/

I just finished the third season on a pair of wet acid batteries. I have a Sears battery charger but it doesn't have an equalization function. Any recommended chargers that do?
I have only tried one desulfator, can't remember which brand it was, and a friend, who is also a marine electrician, tested a few down in Maryland.

His findings and mine were that periodic equalizing chargers put more "rebound" on our test analyzers than the desulfators did. I have not tried them all but when you have the equipment that can measure real quantifiable outcomes in terms of internal resistance or CCA capacity it is hard to argue with that..

The tests certs above show what one equalization cycle can do. I could not measure more than +/- 4 - 8 CCA differneces with the desulfator I tried and those numbers are well within margin of error...

If someone has any information in regard to independent third party testing of desulfators please send along a link. I would love to find one that does what it claims as this would likely be less damaging to the battery than an equalization cycles.

I suspect they would perform better if used from new than trying to restore a battery that has already formed hard lead sulfate.
 

Bob S

.
Sep 27, 2007
1,797
Beneteau 393 New Bedford, MA
Maine,

I pull my batteries into my shop for the winter. I would like to equalize them. Would it be better to do it at the end of the season before storing or the beginning (spring) before installing them? I use a DieHard smart charger to top them off in the spring before installing but that charger isn't capable of equalizing. I can see the benefit of doing so but where do you find a charger that is capable to do it? Would you be willing to recommend a charger?
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,701
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
Maine,

I pull my batteries into my shop for the winter. I would like to equalize them. Would it be better to do it at the end of the season before storing or the beginning (spring) before installing them? I use a DieHard smart charger to top them off in the spring before installing but that charger isn't capable of equalizing. I can see the benefit of doing so but where do you find a charger that is capable to do it? Would you be willing to recommend a charger?
Most chargers that do an equalizing charge are fixed mount. You don't need a powerful charger just a 10A or 20A model but I don't know of any decent portables that equalize..
 
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