ShadowsPapa
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Bill
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2019
- Threads
- 247
- Messages
- 40,463
- Reaction score
- 53,908
- Location
- Runnells, Iowa
- Vehicle(s)
- '25 JTMX, '23 JLU 4xe, '82 SX4, '73 Javelin
- Occupation
- Retired auto mechanic, frmr gov't ntwrk security admin
- Vehicle Showcase
- 3
Yes, it always cranks, but it will live a shorter lift. Cranks doesn't mean fully charged, and sitting with less than a full charge is bad (go to the battery sites, "battery university" and other sites - sitting partially charged is bad)My shopping car, a Honda, sometimes sits for 2 months without being driven. It always cranks.
Yes, and no......... I have a battery on my bench that was actually dead by all other standards. Multiple chargers I had wouldn't charge it, they'd begin, then fail. I put one of my "smart chargers" on it for several days. I'm using it years later. Is it up to full capacity? No, however, I've "recovered" more than one battery over the decades using chargers that claim to rejuvenate........... and they have.Smart chargers, aren't. The $80 toy with the slick marketing won't optimize your battery for peak performance and maximal longevity. It can't really detect and reverse damage to your battery. Patented pulsing at a precise resonance frequency won't turn hardened lead sulfate back to active material.
They CAN work, if you don't let the battery sit for days undercharged. That's what testing actually proves.
Look it up - it's very possible, and there's several articles from battery experts explaining that if caught early, it works, but it takes TIME to work. Not just a few hours.
Thus - my BatteryMinders - I use them pretty regular and get good life out of my batteries - 12 years out of a Ford battery, over 10 out of a John Deere lawn tractor battery, my classic cars get the chargers put on and left on - and the batteries last. I forgot to do that with the battery in my SX4 and it was too late to salvage it - the sulphate had been there too long.
From the web:
Permanent sulfation builds-up when a battery has been in a low state-of-charge for weeks or months. At this stage, restoration of the battery or reversal of the sulfation, is highly unlikely. As a result, the battery will suffer the effects of permanent sulfation.
From a BITOG post - as everyone says, it takes TIME. It's not going to happen in a few hours, maybe even a couple of days - but regular use, and not letting the sulphate harden is the key - catch it early, use them LONG TERM.
Sponsored