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Adaptive Charger
Known for its ability to adapt to the state of charge and condition of the battery. The adaptive charger generally has 3 steps and sometimes 4.
Bulk charge. Often over a given time frame, the charge rate is at a constant amperage for fast recovery up to about 80%. The charger will automatically click into the next stage -
Absorption. This will maintain a given voltage and reduce current as the charge comes up. This will minimise the recovery period with minimum electrolyte loss.
Float. The battery is now fully charged and the voltage will drop to approximately 13.6v (below gassing voltage of 14.4v) The float mode will guard against parasitic discharge or loss due to the maintenance of memory circuits.
The 4th stage when present, could be described as a pulse wake up call. Periodically, the charger will click from float mode back to bulk mode for a brief time and then back to float. This process will guard against stratification (the electrolyte settling into layers of different concentration) Many battery advisors will recommend the battery be equalised every 4 or 6 months to ensure all cells are fully charged which also promotes de stratification.
The adaptive charger is ideal for retaining and holding a battery in a fully charged state over prolonged periods. Ideal for moored vessels, seasonal agricultural equipment and vehicle restoration projects.
Fast Chargers
Fast chargers are higher power units, designed to charge in less than 4 hours. These chargers require active charge termination and often have advanced features such as battery test, bad battery recovery, and automatic maintenance. It is safe to fast-charge all lead acid batteries with modern fast charge algorithms.
This is the fundamental algorithm of the PowerStream quick chargers for lead acid batteries. The curve shown is for a 24 volt (12 cell) battery charger, but the curve is similar at other voltages. The timing of the phase-switching depends on the size of the battery you are using. At point #1 the battery is tested. If the battery is bad a rejuvenation algorithm is started. If the battery is good the charger goes into constant current mode until the voltage reaches 2.3 volts/cell. This allows the battery to be charged at the highest current available from the charger without overloading the charger. Then at point #2 the highest safe voltage is reached and the charger goes into constant voltage mode until the current drops to about 10% of the initial value, indicating a nominally full charge. When this is detected, at point #3 the charger goes into float charging mode at about 2.3 volts /cell to complete the fill and to maintain the battery. At this voltage the battery is safe from overcharging, and also safe from sulfating, so it is also called the maintenance mode.
BZG|Bling wrote:Something like this do the trick then?
http://www.supercheapauto.co.nz/online- ... escription
8A, 6 stage
Would the 4A model do the exact same job if i'm not wanting to charge massive CCA batteries? I guess for $20 more it's not really worth worrying about though.
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