repl battery for accord 01

Discussion in 'Accord' started by ap, Jul 25, 2005.

  1. ap

    ap Guest

    Hello,
    Recently went in for an oil change at 35K.
    The battery load test failed on my car even
    though I appear to have no starting problems.

    My questions:
    Besides the honda battery (delphi), are there
    other good replacement batteries?

    I'm looking at:
    Everready (by AC delco) $65
    Energizer $60
    Bosch $79
    Diehard $79 (Sears)

    Is it normal for the battery to fail load test
    at only 36K?


    THANK YOU!
     
    ap, Jul 25, 2005
    #1
  2. ap

    John Horner Guest

    I would get it retested somewhere else. This sounds like it could be a
    profit-making "service" for the dealer.
    Generally not, though it depends a great deal on the history of the
    vehicle. Cold winters, hot summers and lots of short trips all reduce
    battery life. The biggest battery killer is running 'em down and then
    jump starting. Have you ever left the lights on and killed the battery,
    then needed a jump start? If so, then it is highly likely that your
    battery is ready for replacement.

    Consumer Reports did a battery comparison test recently. You might want
    to check it out if you do need a replacement.

    John
     
    John Horner, Jul 25, 2005
    #2
  3. ap

    twfsa Guest

    Replace the battery, it could go at any time is it worth it, to need the car
    to go somewhere and the battery is dead?

    Tom
     
    twfsa, Jul 27, 2005
    #3
  4. That really depends on the climate. When I lived in Phoenix I never had a
    battery survive three summers - they would almost always give up early in
    the third summer (like around May, since summer there is pretty much
    May-September, and it's hit 100 degrees in March.) Now I live in Flagstaff
    and the only battery I've had to replace in 4 years was in a car we had
    recently bought.

    Other things can suck the life out of a battery, especially if they are run
    down and charged by driving the car.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Jul 27, 2005
    #4
  5. ap

    flobert Guest

    Batteries are not engine componants, they work by time, and not miles.
    Was the battery topped up?
    Did you let the car run for a little before turning the AC on, and
    similarly turn the AC off a little bit before you turned the engine
    off in Az? if not, thats what would have killed them.
    Yes and no. The battery is designed to be chargable. using, and
    draining and charging the battery doesn't 'damage it' per se. If it is
    kept below 10V for an extended period of time (say 12 hours or more)
    then it is irreperably damaged. using a trickle charger is the best
    way to charge a low battery.
     
    flobert, Jul 28, 2005
    #5
  6. ap

    John Horner Guest

    Au contrar, cycling a battery, especially cycling it into a deep
    discharge mode, absolutely is a major factor in it's expected life time.
    Automotive lead-acid batteries do not recover well from deep
    discharge events. Take almost any new conventional battery and run it
    through twenty cycles of 90% discharge followed by full recharge. Most
    will be dead by the end of such a torture test.

    John
     
    John Horner, Jul 28, 2005
    #6
  7. My car didn't have A/C but had short battery life the same as my wife's. Two
    years, then replace (and that was with batteries advertised as being
    designed for hot climates). On hot afternoons the temp guage would already
    be off the bottom peg before I ever started the engine. The day it was 122,
    when I started my car the battery simply exploded.

    I also buy only full-service batteries. Sealed batteries in that heat are a
    bad idea, and I just carry on the tradition here.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Jul 28, 2005
    #7
  8. More on that and the heat issue on William Darden's great battery site
    http://www.uuhome.de/william.darden/carfaq12.htm

    (The Interstate Battery map he has agrees closely with my Phoenix
    experience, too: 30 months.)

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Jul 29, 2005
    #8
  9. ap

    flobert Guest

    a 90% discharge takes its voltage to somewhere in the 5-6V range,
    obviously that damages plates. 10V is about 50%, and is aboutt he
    minimum limit for successfull resotation.
     
    flobert, Jul 29, 2005
    #9
  10. ap

    flobert Guest

    Depends on the type of sealed battery. My preference is for a sealled
    gas recombination based one, with gas vent - they don't explode at
    all, don't even leak fluid. Used to run them all day long in a big
    plastic greenhouse, lit by some 40KW of lighting, inside an old WW2
    building, with the outside temp in the 110's - not a single
    roble,.Course, at $300-ish a shot for a reletively small 30Ah one,
    they're not cheap, but worth it - especially since they'll do about
    2000A peak output, and will take the same input as charge.
     
    flobert, Jul 29, 2005
    #10
  11. Unless I'm mistaken, all sealed lead-acid batteries are recombination with
    overpresure vents, also known as Valve Regulated Lead Acid (VRLA) batteries.

    There are different grid chemistries, though. I assume the automotive types
    are designed for higher temperatures and non-deep cycle. We use absorbed
    electrolyte VRLAs where I work (communication sites) and they are spec'd at
    15 or 20 years life, depending on the specific model. We started using them
    because they have a smaller floor area for the capacity than flooded cells
    and because they don't need venting to the outside or other safety
    precautions. They have been very tempramental, though, and we have not had
    one last ten years yet. They all die the same way, and the process was
    described to me by a friend who worked for ABB selling the things. As they
    age, the leakage current for a given temperature creeps up. At some point,
    either because of A/C failure or just because the critical temperature
    dropped to room temperature, the battery will go into thermal runaway. The
    leakage current will rise, heating the battery and increasing the leakage
    and further heating the battery. A couple weeks ago I caught one of our
    banks at 120 degrees F and consuming 1500 watts... because somebody left the
    room door open for a few hours. $20K will fix it up just fine, though. The
    highest temperature we've recorded was 191F, and the tech felt the heat on
    his face when he entered the room. Around 220F the polypropylene cases
    soften and the batteries explode like small bombs - I've seen a picture of a
    room full of equipment that was splattered with boiling acid that way.

    The demise in automotive use should be different because a charger isn't on
    it 24/7. Higher temperatures during charging cause the battery to vent,
    losing the vented vapor forever. Eventually, the lost water causes the
    battery to dry up and the output current and capacity to drop - the way gell
    cells (and that's what all VRLA batteries are, after all) have died for
    decades. A whole lot better than going supernova!

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Jul 30, 2005
    #11
  12. ap

    flobert Guest

    sounds like you're using cheap ones. yuasa, powersonic, or similar?
    those i'd expect, they're prety low quality ones. Personally, i'll
    always use hawkers - never had a single runaway, explosion or other
    problem. Had to deal with lots of the cheaper ones exploding, and
    catching fire before, but in similar situations the hawkers have
    swelled, and thats about it. There's a reason yuasas and such aren't
    certified safe for air travel, and hawkers are.
     
    flobert, Jul 30, 2005
    #12
  13. More expensive than the Hawkers, I suspect - they're GNB Absolyte batteries.
    The small banks run $5000 US, while the larger banks are $20 thousand. The
    large bank I mentioned was half a 3000 AH 48V bank. They look like
    http://www.batterypowersystems.com/products/absolyteIIP.htm .

    The likely difference in failure modes is because of the type of service. In
    communication service, the batteries are "floated" at 2.25 volts per cell by
    fixed voltage, current limited chargers. In automotive use the charge is
    more intermittent, so thermal runaway is rare. However, the batteries are
    much smaller so the thermal mass is smaller. A battery that did fine on
    in-town trips is really tested on long trips, where the charging is constant
    enough to possibly trigger thermal runaway.

    But I suspect the design is different enough that the car batteries fail
    through dehydration most of the time. Our Toyota Prius has a sealed
    lead-acid aux battery... reports from people who've had to replace them are
    very familiar. They let it run down, charged it by jumping and letting the
    car charge it, often in warm weather. Sealed batteries are still the old
    gell cells with minor updates. As long as they aren't in the engine
    compartment they aren't too bad.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Jul 30, 2005
    #13
  14. ap

    flobert Guest

    a 30Ah 12V hawker is about 200, maybe $250.
    half a bank, of them is 100 for the capcity dobled for the voltage,
    or, 200. 20,000/200 is about $100 a battery, which is the cheap side,
    even taking into accont bulk-buying. thats only slightly more than the
    low-end yuasa's, and then you have to build the bank, and transport
    etc.
    Actually, i use the hawkers mainly in electric vehicles. Part of my
    job involves building and testing automotive-type electrical systems,
    and i usea hawker till its flat, and charge, or at least untli i've
    finished the day, then top up.

    I know British telecom also use them for emergency power systems, and
    for portable emergency power packs - and if you've ever seen BT's
    infrastructure, you'll understand why they don't skimp on the
    batteries.
     
    flobert, Jul 31, 2005
    #14
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