Wow, the new 100 ah cells are monsters compared to the little baby 75 ah cells! Using my bathroom scale the old 75 ah cells are 50 lbs. each, so 200 lbs for the whole pack... the new 100 ah cells had a shipping weight of 76 lbs, call it 75 lbs without the packing material and you get 300 lbs. for the whole pack.
My mower was suffering from pathetic run time, no longer able to do my whole lawn without having to stop and recharge... since charging is so slow that made mowing the lawn go from an hour or so to taking all afternoon. When I first got the mower I was able to mow the whole lawn and have just a bit of battery power left (I mulch with a fairly short cut). Now with the new pack installed (pain in the butt re-doing battery tray) I can mow the whole lawn and still have 75% remaining!
I didn't discover the idea of desulfating a battery until after I purchased the new 100 ah cells, or I would have tried restoring the old battery pack instead of spending the $$$ to purchase a new one. Using a good battery tester I got 297 CCA on cell one, 275 CCA on cell two, 240 CCA on cell three, and 237 CCA on cell four. Anyone know what the CCA rating of the 75 ah cells are when new?
With the 75 ah battery installed the battery tray has spacers at the front and back, along with spacers between the cells (down the middle of the pack). With the 100 ah battery I had to remove the center line spacers that go between cells completely, and I removed the front and rear spacers as well... but that left a bit of a gap front to back, so I cut down one of the spacers and installed it on the back of the pack. Does a "factory" 100 ah pack have any spacers between the cells on the mid line? I could maybe fit some cardboard between them but I don't know if there is any point to doing so.
Since I have 104 run hours on my mower, while I had the battery pack out I changed the rear differential gear oil. Look at the difference between what I drained out and some fresh gear oil!
Since I have found out about desulferization I installed a 48V desulferator on the new pack, and I am using a dsulferator/charger to try and restore the 75 ah cells. If I am successful I can use them as a battery backup for my fridge and freezer in case of power outage, or sell them on e-bay... if they don't recover I will sell them as scrap.
Later,
Keith
My mower was suffering from pathetic run time, no longer able to do my whole lawn without having to stop and recharge... since charging is so slow that made mowing the lawn go from an hour or so to taking all afternoon. When I first got the mower I was able to mow the whole lawn and have just a bit of battery power left (I mulch with a fairly short cut). Now with the new pack installed (pain in the butt re-doing battery tray) I can mow the whole lawn and still have 75% remaining!
I didn't discover the idea of desulfating a battery until after I purchased the new 100 ah cells, or I would have tried restoring the old battery pack instead of spending the $$$ to purchase a new one. Using a good battery tester I got 297 CCA on cell one, 275 CCA on cell two, 240 CCA on cell three, and 237 CCA on cell four. Anyone know what the CCA rating of the 75 ah cells are when new?
With the 75 ah battery installed the battery tray has spacers at the front and back, along with spacers between the cells (down the middle of the pack). With the 100 ah battery I had to remove the center line spacers that go between cells completely, and I removed the front and rear spacers as well... but that left a bit of a gap front to back, so I cut down one of the spacers and installed it on the back of the pack. Does a "factory" 100 ah pack have any spacers between the cells on the mid line? I could maybe fit some cardboard between them but I don't know if there is any point to doing so.
Since I have 104 run hours on my mower, while I had the battery pack out I changed the rear differential gear oil. Look at the difference between what I drained out and some fresh gear oil!
Since I have found out about desulferization I installed a 48V desulferator on the new pack, and I am using a dsulferator/charger to try and restore the 75 ah cells. If I am successful I can use them as a battery backup for my fridge and freezer in case of power outage, or sell them on e-bay... if they don't recover I will sell them as scrap.
Later,
Keith