Cajun power
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- Apr 11, 2023
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before buying a new battery, do this (experience talking here...will save you some money possibly and more importantly help you determine the problems/root cause)
1. take battery off mower. Clean those posts ...vinegar and water works fine.
2. with multi-meter test dc volts. write this value down on paper
3. connect a battery charger to the battery. but don't plug in just yet.
4 connect multi-meter to test dc volt, use clamps so it doesn't move.
5. now turn on battery charger and notice test dc volts change.
6. what you are looking for is an initial inrush of current, when first apply battery charge power to the battery..you will see this as volts above 12...probably as high as 14.5 for a battery that is taking a charge. But it can be as low as 12.8- 12.5 for a battery that is already charged (the range is provided for batteries that are still "good" but have worn down a little bit. If the battery charge is above 12.8 and into the range of 14.5 let that go until the battery is fully charged. This might take as long as several hours. If you battery charged has an overprotection circuit, great let it go unattended. But if your battery charger is ancient it might not have overcharge protection and you want to watch it carefully until the charge normalizes in the 12.8 to 12.5 range. Then after that take it off battery charger and let it rest for 1 hour.
7. test dc volts again with multi-meter. volts should not drop by more than .2 volts. If it does drops more than .2 volts, then you probably have a bad battery (or you could have a poor or bad battery charger!!! it happens)
8. if you want to know for sure about your battery health, then find another battery charger that is good, and do the recharge again..now compare the results from the original charger. Any improvement? IF YES, then your original battery charger is no good or working poorly.
9. and finally, dc volts will NOT TELL YOU the actual state of charge health of a battery. The correct and reliable way to determine the health and state of charge of a battery is to performed loaded test. And for that the process is simple: charge the battery until it reaches a fully charged state. Using a good battery charger. If that battery cannot sit for an hour and maintain 12.8 - 12.6 dc volts, it's probably not a good battery. But it might still have some life left regardless. Take this fully charged battery to autozone and have them do a load test. The amount of load applied will be according to the rated cold cranking specs of the battery. For instance if your mower battery is rated for 200 cold cranking amps, the load tester will probably be 200 amps...at that load, there is a "decay rate" that is used by the load meter to determine if the battery discharges at that load at that rate. If it discharges faster than the decay rate range, the battery is deemed inop. If it discharges within the range of decay rate, then it is a good battery.
as you can see, there are many factors involved doing a proper battery test. Many people just assume the battery is dead for instance, when the real problem is that the charger is junk. And yes, there are many junk chargers sold! I like the old school analog gauge ..not the led. The chargers swing a needle and that really helps to SEE the inrush of current in real time and it's extremely helpful to diagnose a battery. Some of these old school chargers also have built in load testers, and that can be very helpful in diagnosing not just state of charge, but if you apply that to a battery attached to the alternator or stator charging circuit, you can witness if the stator is providing proper charging circuit power!?
obviously, the battery is not the only issue here, so before you reattach ANYTHING to the mower, get that mower circuit back to a negative ground and make sure your diode isn't blown and you can test the stator too. university youtube is helpful on how to do that.
1. take battery off mower. Clean those posts ...vinegar and water works fine.
2. with multi-meter test dc volts. write this value down on paper
3. connect a battery charger to the battery. but don't plug in just yet.
4 connect multi-meter to test dc volt, use clamps so it doesn't move.
5. now turn on battery charger and notice test dc volts change.
6. what you are looking for is an initial inrush of current, when first apply battery charge power to the battery..you will see this as volts above 12...probably as high as 14.5 for a battery that is taking a charge. But it can be as low as 12.8- 12.5 for a battery that is already charged (the range is provided for batteries that are still "good" but have worn down a little bit. If the battery charge is above 12.8 and into the range of 14.5 let that go until the battery is fully charged. This might take as long as several hours. If you battery charged has an overprotection circuit, great let it go unattended. But if your battery charger is ancient it might not have overcharge protection and you want to watch it carefully until the charge normalizes in the 12.8 to 12.5 range. Then after that take it off battery charger and let it rest for 1 hour.
7. test dc volts again with multi-meter. volts should not drop by more than .2 volts. If it does drops more than .2 volts, then you probably have a bad battery (or you could have a poor or bad battery charger!!! it happens)
8. if you want to know for sure about your battery health, then find another battery charger that is good, and do the recharge again..now compare the results from the original charger. Any improvement? IF YES, then your original battery charger is no good or working poorly.
9. and finally, dc volts will NOT TELL YOU the actual state of charge health of a battery. The correct and reliable way to determine the health and state of charge of a battery is to performed loaded test. And for that the process is simple: charge the battery until it reaches a fully charged state. Using a good battery charger. If that battery cannot sit for an hour and maintain 12.8 - 12.6 dc volts, it's probably not a good battery. But it might still have some life left regardless. Take this fully charged battery to autozone and have them do a load test. The amount of load applied will be according to the rated cold cranking specs of the battery. For instance if your mower battery is rated for 200 cold cranking amps, the load tester will probably be 200 amps...at that load, there is a "decay rate" that is used by the load meter to determine if the battery discharges at that load at that rate. If it discharges faster than the decay rate range, the battery is deemed inop. If it discharges within the range of decay rate, then it is a good battery.
as you can see, there are many factors involved doing a proper battery test. Many people just assume the battery is dead for instance, when the real problem is that the charger is junk. And yes, there are many junk chargers sold! I like the old school analog gauge ..not the led. The chargers swing a needle and that really helps to SEE the inrush of current in real time and it's extremely helpful to diagnose a battery. Some of these old school chargers also have built in load testers, and that can be very helpful in diagnosing not just state of charge, but if you apply that to a battery attached to the alternator or stator charging circuit, you can witness if the stator is providing proper charging circuit power!?
obviously, the battery is not the only issue here, so before you reattach ANYTHING to the mower, get that mower circuit back to a negative ground and make sure your diode isn't blown and you can test the stator too. university youtube is helpful on how to do that.