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12v battery maintenance, issues, etc.


FROSTYBALLS
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28 minutes ago, Chas G said:

I will get the 3m ones so I can fix the charger to the wall in my garage and plug in.

Exactly what I did.

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My Chr has gone nearly 3 years no issues includes 3 weeks stay in hospital is it the same Battery as the Yaris and Corolla ? 

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After three years, the "Desulfating" mode is already started for 30-60 minutes during charging .

image.thumb.png.cf6b159d3aedc922b5f10c349eafb602.png

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On 12/13/2023 at 8:00 PM, Roy124 said:

Exactly what I did.

I will get the 3m ones so I can fix the charger to the wall in my garage and plug in.

Toyota yaris cross:-

Being able to charge the 12 volt Battery in my garage has brought to mind another question.

If for some reason the car won't go into "ready" mode, how on earth would I or anyone else be able to get it out of the garage for recovery.

I understand that it is possible to lift a small hatch on the side of the gear lever surround to move it into neutral but would this also release the hand brake and steering lock so the car can be rolled out of my garage?

Apologies if this is a stupid question.

Thanks Chas

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I have used these in the past to move vehicles when the electric handbrake has stick on.

 

MSW Hydraulic Wheel Dolly Car Skate Vehicle Positioning Jack Foot Pump  Hydraulic Tyre Lift Roller Dolly Hoist 2 Pcs. 680kg Ea. MSW-HRH-680 (Tyre  Width 30cm, 4 Nylon Castors, Max. Lift Height 280mm) :

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Chas, good question. It would depend on how tight a fit your car is on your garage.  I assume you can open your car door to get in and out.  If it is you can pop the bonnet lock.  Your next problem would be accessing the fuse box on the near side of the engine.  If you can they you can connect the Battery pack jump leads.

However your question prompts another solution. Attach the jumper pack to the charger tail off the Battery.  However if you have  a charger that you can connect to the fuse box terminal or the Battery tail you should not need to use the jumper pack

Only away from home might it be necessary to use the jumper pack.  I think you might be able to use a 12v socket (dash or boot) with a suitable lead.

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2 hours ago, Roy124 said:

Chas, good question. It would depend on how tight a fit your car is on your garage.  I assume you can open your car door to get in and out.  If it is you can pop the bonnet lock.  Your next problem would be accessing the fuse box on the near side of the engine.  If you can they you can connect the battery pack jump leads.

However your question prompts another solution. Attach the jumper pack to the charger tail off the battery.  However if you have  a charger that you can connect to the fuse box terminal or the battery tail you should not need to use the jumper pack

Only away from home might it be necessary to use the jumper pack.  I think you might be able to use a 12v socket (dash or boot) with a suitable lead.

@Roy124 thanks I am using the terminal under the bonnet to charge the Battery. Enough room to get round the car.

I have got the ctek 5 leads plus the BM2 monitor which I may fit myself.

@Max_Headroom thanks, I had thought of using skates (£65/pair) but i did wonder if anyone had an easier solution. Maybe the AA/Rac carry skates in their vans.

https://www.halfords.com/tools/garage-equipment/garage-essentials/halfords-pair-wheel-dollies---500kg-541782.html?istCompanyId=b8708c57-7a02-4cf6-b2c0-dc36b54a327e&istFeedId=367c5610-f937-4c81-8609-f84582324cd6&istItemId=pmmaxplat&istBid=t&_$ja=tsid:|cid:17363835999|agid:|tid:|crid:|nw:x|rnd:10563135687276706580|dvc:m|adp:|mt:|loc:9046084&gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAiA1fqrBhA1EiwAMU5m_0euOnuFyilmxQequuVp7w8SEejgCveutrmcR9SQU549la3uylkXZxoCiKwQAvD_BwE

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5 hours ago, Chas G said:

If for some reason the car won't go into "ready" mode, how on earth would I or anyone else be able to get it out of the garage for recovery.

Reverse car into garage? Easy to access fuse box / boost connector.

I fitted a 12v socket in the Battery cover under rear seat that can be used for charging or for connecting a boost pack.

IMG_7112.thumb.jpeg.94eba90fbba98e04ca761c794ac0e015.jpeg

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46 minutes ago, jthspace said:

Reverse car into garage? Easy to access fuse box / boost connector.

I fitted a 12v socket in the battery cover under rear seat that can be used for charging or for connecting a boost pack.

IMG_7112.thumb.jpeg.94eba90fbba98e04ca761c794ac0e015.jpeg

Excellent job. Well done.👍

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I have an optimate trickle charger, connected to socket lead attached to 12v Battery. I checked a couple of times voltage before charge, after 4/5 days non use, at 11.2 and 11.9. After a day or two on the trickle charger the voltage reaches a maximum of 12.5 v.. What does this indicate re the state of the Battery?

Could anyone confirm, again, the largest capacity and size of potential replacement batteries? what would the expected voltage readings be on a larger capacity replacement Battery. Many thanks, and apologies if the questions have previously been answered.

 

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1 hour ago, Pete Ilk said:

I have an optimate trickle charger, connected to socket lead attached to 12v Battery. I checked a couple of times voltage before charge, after 4/5 days non use, at 11.2 and 11.9. After a day or two on the trickle charger the voltage reaches a maximum of 12.5 v.. What does this indicate re the state of the battery?

Could anyone conpfirm, again, the largest capacity and size of potential replacement batteries? what would the expected voltage readings be on a larger capacity replacement battery. Many thanks, and apologies if the questions have previously been answered.

 

Pete, first question, to me, that your 4/5 reading suggests either some deterioration in the Battery or your meter is under reading.  I found my meter read lower than a Battery monitor attached directly to the Battery.  When my charger has been on I get a similar reading. In other words probably no problem. 

I can't give an opinion on the capacity for YC batteries but my garage replaced the original  battery on my Corolla from the 35Amp for a 42Amp which was the same size.  The voltage readings should follow the same profile of a longer time scale.

Simplistically,   35AHr battery supplying 10A for one hour would drop to 25A. The 42A would drop to 32A.  The former would be at 71% and the larger 76%.

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2 hours ago, Pete Ilk said:

I checked a couple of times voltage before charge, after 4/5 days non use, at 11.2 and 11.9.

11.2 volts across the Battery terminals is a very low state of charge and leaving a Battery in that state will see it deteriorate due to sulphation of the plates.

11.9 volts is still a low state of charge but if that were encountered in say a traditional combustion engine car it would start the car as normal and give no real hint it was in fact 'low'.

2 hours ago, Pete Ilk said:

After a day or two on the trickle charger the voltage reaches a maximum of 12.5 v.. What does this indicate re the state of the battery?

While the charger is connected the voltage should go higher than 12.5 volts and typically would be around 14 to 15 volts while on charge. If the charger has a low current output then it might take a while to climb higher. 

 

2 hours ago, Pete Ilk said:

what would the expected voltage readings be on a larger capacity replacement battery.

If you activate any of the cars electronic systems while measuring the voltage then it would typically fall down from a high of 14 to 15 volts down to around 12.5 volts because the charger could not supply the additional current.

 

2 hours ago, Pete Ilk said:

what would the expected voltage readings be on a larger capacity replacement battery.

The chemistry of the Battery defines the voltages. Fully charged batteries of 10Ah, 30Ah, 60Ah and 100Ah will all show similar voltages at similar states of charge.

Think of that like a tank of water. A 10 gallon or a 100 gallon tank are both 'full' when full and both half empty when half the contents have been removed, however the half empty 100 gallon tank still has much more 'content' available than the half empty 10 gallon one.    

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1 hour ago, Mooly said:

While the charger is connected the voltage should go higher than 12.5 volts and typically would be around 14 to 15 volts while on charge. If the charger has a low current output then it might take a while to climb higher.

Thanks for info. My voltage tester is separate to the charger. The charger will be charging at 14 plus v when on top boosting charging phase, and lower on maintenance phase . When I disconnect the charger and measure the volts it is about 12.5v. Are you saying that it should be higher when disconnected after a long charge?

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Pete, your 12.5v  might not be that accurate.   Are you using an analogue meter?  An OBD reader or the BM2/6 give digital readings to 0.01v, in my car they give different readings.  The former is instantaneous whereas the BM is a short term average reading.

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When you remove the charger, the voltage across the Battery terminals will fall back fairly quickly although how quickly depends on how much background current draw there is pulling it down. In reality It could easily be just a matter of a few tens of seconds or alternatively if there were no current draw at all the Battery would remain at perhaps 13v or more for many hours. A quick flash of the headlights or operating the central locking would pull that 13v down instantly though. 

At this point and given a healthy and fully charged Battery what happens next depends on the background current draw and this is where all the problems occur...

...it takes a surprisingly long time for a battery to fully charge because the charge current taken by the battery naturally tails off as the charge level rises. All the evidence form all the many threads and users with battery issues points to the fundamental problem being that the background current draw takes more from the battery than can be put back by normal use (normal time spent driving).

This is what I believe happens...

If the battery starts at 100% and you see it down at 80% after say 5 days standing then a few minutes charging (the cars own charging circuit) will see that 80% rise very quickly to say 90% but then the battery itself stops taking all that the charger can deliver and the charge level then climbs ever more slowly. Lets say 80 to 90% after 10 minutes but then it takes another 10 minutes to bring that to say 92% and another 30 minutes to reach 95% and ever longer to put that last few percent back.

Now the same scenario happens again only now you are starting from say 95%. The overall consequence is the batteries overall state of charge falls over time. As the charge level gets ever lower the battery starts to 'age' more quickly due to sulphation and at this point it becomes a downward spiral. The same background current draw now seems to pull the voltage down ever more quickly and the battery just never gets a prolonged charge to recover it. After a while it is past a point of no return.

In a conventional car it is less of a problem because there is not this highish level of background current draw. The battery may be deteriorated and in poor state but because there is no current draw it stays in that same state day after day and will still start the conventional car normally. It may be old and way down on capacity but it is 'enough' given that nothing is discharging it when it it is parked up. 

 

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27 minutes ago, Pete Ilk said:

Thanks for info. My voltage tester is separate to the charger. The charger will be charging at 14 plus v when on top boosting charging phase, and lower on maintenance phase . When I disconnect the charger and measure the volts it is about 12.5v. Are you saying that it should be higher when disconnected after a long charge?

I have a measurement of 12.8v fully charged Battery. 12.5v is ok. You have a charger so wouldn't need to put a bigger Ah Battery in unless current one fails. 

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1 hour ago, Mooly said:

if there were no current draw at all the battery would remain at perhaps 13v or more for many hours. A quick flash of the headlights or operating the central locking would pull that 13v down instantly though. 

The voltage will drop as the chemical reaction (movement of the hydrogen ions) will stop after we stop charging and the electrolyte saturation (measured by the density where 1.28g/ccm indicates fully charged) stabilises. It doesn't depend on the current draw. It will of course be affected if we take any current out of it (how much voltage will drop depends on the internal resistance of the Battery and the current). 

Anyway the problem with car batteries is based on the fact that it's really time consuming to charge it fully, most of the time we are ok with letting the alternator / charging circuit to charge to something like 80% when the current is still big enough to put significant charge and we are still underneath the 14.4V maximum voltage level. 

Ignoring Battery temperature corrections, we cannot charge with more than 14.4V as we risk hydrolysis (bubbling) and loosing water from electrolyte (not to mention producing hydrogen) but as the Battery voltage rises, with constant max voltage the current has to fall to even less than an amp. So it might take days of charging to get that remaining 20% back. 

That's why it is adviced to charge the battery with the charger from time to time, especially if we risk having negative energy balance (we use up more than we put back when driving). It happened previously with the cars with ICE that were doing short trips with many engine start/stop cycles. No matter how big the battery, it would eventually run out.

Now it's different because the modern car uses the energy when it is parked and even with hybrid engines we don't use up that much of the energy to start but the small battery makes it easy to deplete it if we drive occasionally (or we are doing short trips) 

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Mooly,  I disagree only about 'conventional' car.  I would say older traditional car to differentiate from modern connected cars which will have not dissimilar current draws while not in use.

The only difference between ICE and Hybrid may be the alternator doing a rapid recharge after engine start. 

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Its just a choice of words... so I mean ICE without such things as keyless entry and it not phoning home all the time. The only drain on these is the tiny draw of the remote receiver for a normal 'WiFi' key with lock and unlock buttons on it plus the normal background draw of the ECU and immobiliser and alarm (if fitted) which is very low indeed.

38 minutes ago, Roy124 said:

The only difference between ICE and Hybrid may be the alternator doing a rapid recharge after engine start. 

That's a fair point under certain conditions although I see so many times in these threads that owners say that they see 14.4 volts or close to that value when charging in ready mode or when driving. If that is so then it doesn't matter whether it is a high output alternator or the DC/DC convertor in a Hybrid doing the charging, the Battery doesn't care. All it sees is the 14.4 volts and if that is present then it is the Battery itself determining the charge current, not the charger (alternator or the DC /DC convertor). That to me is the problem.

The batteries seem to have accelerated aging due to the type of usage and an insufficient charge time to maintain them in good shape. A new  Battery has a very low internal resistance and that means it can draw lots of charge current even as the terminal voltage approaches 14.4 volts. A deteriorated battery can not allow (or accept if you prefer) this current to pass.

I hope this below makes some kind of sense. It is a simple simulation I set up to show how the internal resistance of a battery greatly affects charge acceptance and current delivery. In reality there is more going on because the internal resistance also varies with charge level but it illustrates the point. The aged battery can not take much charge current and so it would take a very long time bring a moderately discharged battery back to full charge through driving alone.   

The batteries differ only in the internal resistance figure I set. First image shows charge current for each. Second image shows the terminal voltage under the same loading.

The old and new batteries are labelled and the alternator or DC/DC convertor is at the right producing a constant 14 volts. The second image separates the two as they now discharge into their respective loads.

The reality will be a bit different in raw numbers but the principle of the issue remains the same. 

 

Screenshot2023-12-24163629.thumb.png.d32347d879978765c0c2904b78d791fd.png

Screenshot2023-12-24164016.thumb.png.fce5140fabca04a399e23f06222270b0.png

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Please come back. All I had to do was put Petrol in you and get you serviced

I wish I hadn't traded you in for a load of anxiety even though I have disabled "smart" entry, taken out the Dashcam and disabled MyT cloud. From fully charged at 12.7 volts to dip below 12 volts -

6 days of none use (0.1v/day)

2 weeks of my normal mileage of mixed journeys at best.

Took them a week to sell my immaculate 2020 Petrol Yaris Y20. 

20231103_102540.thumb.jpg.4ac836c77a23ea529ef852ea5d26be30.jpg

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20230117_150123.thumb.jpg.ea368ae23c35f12c5f3019fc126af9fd.jpg

 

20231103_102707.thumb.jpg.1102aa5a7db5c25e162c4d2e0b80f787.jpg

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I need to get the BM2 Battery monitor fitted ASAP with alarms to my phone when it reaches 12 volts so I can effectively manage the state of the charge. 

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1 hour ago, Chas G said:

Please come back. All I had to do was put Petrol in you and get you serviced

I wish I hadn't traded you in for a load of anxiety even though I have disabled "smart" entry, taken out the dashcam and disabled MyT cloud. From fully charged at 12.7 volts to dip below 12 volts -

6 days of none use (0.1v/day)

2 weeks of my normal mileage of mixed journeys at best.

Took them a week to sell my immaculate 2020 Petrol Yaris Y20. 

20231103_102540.thumb.jpg.4ac836c77a23ea529ef852ea5d26be30.jpg

 20231103_102529.thumb.jpg.c646108a8d696e3fdbe49bc5952e99b9.jpg

20230117_150123.thumb.jpg.ea368ae23c35f12c5f3019fc126af9fd.jpg

 

20231103_102707.thumb.jpg.1102aa5a7db5c25e162c4d2e0b80f787.jpg

Know what you mean, do mainly short trips and ended up trading in my 2022 Yaris Hybrid Design for a 2020 Yaris Y20 and while the 2022 Yaris was better to drive am more than happy with the Y20 and am planned on keeping it long term.

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12 hours ago, Chas G said:

I need to get the BM2 battery monitor fitted ASAP with alarms to my phone when it reaches 12 volts so I can effectively manage the state of the charge. 

I’ve seen my Battery drop to mid 11’s and still fine to start. If your dealer can’t/wont fit charge lead/BM2 and you fancy a drive up to South Cambs near Duxford Imperial War Museum M11 Jct 10 then I will happily fit both for you. 

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