tothemax93
Well-Known Member
odyssey Pc 680 battery. $114.00 to my door. Thats the best price I've seen for that battery. Mine is on the way.:clapping: It's coming from batterymart.
Thats good to hear. I ordered my friday and it was in the mail friday. sounds like a good company.I just ordered one from them monday. It got here friday. From batterymart that is
Thats a new brand to me. Is that what your using Mike?
Great postThey say you need "special" charging for sealed batteries, but I think this is a load of crap.
Your Max(or any other motorcycle) is a "dumb" charger. The R/R supplies current constantly, it doesn't switch modes or anything. It doesn't know the difference between a regular wet battery and a sealed, and couldn't do anything differently even if it did. Assuming your stator is 300 watts, and 150 is that is "excess" after lights and ignition 150/14.4= up to 10 amps of charging to the battery(in theory, actual would be off a bit). That current is always supplied whenever the engine is running, just the actual flow of current tapers to near zero as the battery becomes fully charged. So if these batteries "needed" a special charge, they'd be failing left and right.
The idea charge profile is slightly different (slower) for sealed since too-fast charging generates heat, and in a sealed battery the expansion that heat causes has nowhere to go. Just don't blast them with high-current charges and you'll be a-ok. For MC size ones I'd use the common 2a setting that's on most chargers. For car size ones I wouldn't go higher than 6a.
It's just a way for manufacturers to try and convince you that you need a new "smart" charger by over-playing the importance of special chargers. I had a manual charger apart that had a "lead-acid/AGM" switch in addition to the amp selector. From what I could see the switch did absolutely nothing, considering both sides of the switch were soldered together at the same terminal.
They say you need "special" charging for sealed batteries, but I think this is a load of crap.
Your Max(or any other motorcycle) is a "dumb" charger. The R/R supplies current constantly, it doesn't switch modes or anything. It doesn't know the difference between a regular wet battery and a sealed, and couldn't do anything differently even if it did. Assuming your stator is 300 watts, and 150 is that is "excess" after lights and ignition 150/14.4= up to 10 amps of charging to the battery(in theory, actual would be off a bit). That current is always supplied whenever the engine is running, just the actual flow of current tapers to near zero as the battery becomes fully charged. So if these batteries "needed" a special charge, they'd be failing left and right.
The idea charge profile is slightly different (slower) for sealed since too-fast charging generates heat, and in a sealed battery the expansion that heat causes has nowhere to go. Just don't blast them with high-current charges and you'll be a-ok. For MC size ones I'd use the common 2a setting that's on most chargers. For car size ones I wouldn't go higher than 6a.
It's just a way for manufacturers to try and convince you that you need a new "smart" charger by over-playing the importance of special chargers. I had a manual charger apart that had a "lead-acid/AGM" switch in addition to the amp selector. From what I could see the switch did absolutely nothing, considering both sides of the switch were soldered together at the same terminal.
I agree, good post.
Smart chargers can perform an actual current limit and tailor it to a time value or what not producing a charging curve that doesn't hammer a discharged battery too hard even if it's just about near dead.......
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