floating battery charger
- wiredgeorge
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
I bought a Harbor Freight "floating" charger that the package touts as being able to keep the battery freshly charged over periods of disuse. It is made for a motorcycle battery. I installed some leads off my battery yesterday and installed the charger as well. The charger seems to put out about 12.8 VDC (packaging says 13.25 VDC) all the time.
What is the difference between a floating charger and regular low amp charger? Are you supposed to leave the floating maintenance charger connected all the time when the bike isn't being used?
wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
www.wgcarbs.com
Too many bikes to list!
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Bluemeanie
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 2519
- Thank you received: 14
1980 KZ650F1, Bought new out the door for $2,162.98!
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- RonKZ650
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 3704
- Thank you received: 241
321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- RetroRiceRocketRider
- Offline
- User
- ...bring in the machine that goes PING!
- Posts: 1641
- Thank you received: 29
The Battery Tenders simply lessen the amount of charge being applied as the battery reaches a fully charged status, but never truely shut off.
I think I can see where a Floating Charger charger might be better than a Battery Tender.
Someone please (kindly) correct me if I'm wrong in this thought:
While being charged, the battery fluid level will drop slightly due to being heated/evaporation quicker than a battery that is only (truely) being charged when it drops to a certain state of discharge.
So during a long (winter) storage, the fluid level won't have to be monitored as closely, or perhaps not even at all after the initial level check before storage.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- pyxen
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 488
- Thank you received: 7
I had a lot of trouble starting my bike this fall, and I'm nearly 100% sure it's just a battery issue. It was so low, that the fuel/oil lights rarely came on when I turned the ignition on. :pinch:
As soon as I gave it some juice from a charger, it'd work like a charm..or if I'd been out riding a bit (and therefore charging the battery), it'd start like a dream.
Floating or Tender ... Floating or Tender ??
---> I think I understand the floating charger a little better now. From what I can gather around the 'net, the battery charger has a constant current while actively charging the battery, and once full changes over to a constant voltage, but low current, so that the battery won't lose charge - but will maintain around 13V of charge indefinitely. Because there's low current, there is no risk of boiling the battery, since barely any energy is actually making it into the battery. The elevated/constant voltage acts as a dam almost - and blocks the energy from leaving the "resevoir" (battery) while plugged in.
It makes sense to me, anyways.
Am I way off?
Post edited by: pyxen, at: 2007/02/14 15:23
84 KZ550-F2 LTD
93 ZR550-B4
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- JimatMilkyWay
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 285
- Thank you received: 12
Welcome to the site, wiredgeorge.....I bought a Harbor Freight "floating" charger that the package touts as being able to keep the battery freshly charged over periods of disuse. It is made for a motorcycle battery....What is the difference between a floating charger and regular low amp charger? Are you supposed to leave the floating maintenance charger connected all the time when the bike isn't being used?
I axed DR. Google 'bout floating chargers, and it is not a particularly common term. The link myweb.hinet.net/home10/garauto/battery%20charger.htm did not have a lot of useful stuff on it.
I consider myself sort of a electrical technician, so I will try to find out more.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- pyxen
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 488
- Thank you received: 7
FYI - WG's been around a bit..he's one of the resident carb gurus.
84 KZ550-F2 LTD
93 ZR550-B4
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- JimatMilkyWay
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 285
- Thank you received: 12
Hi pyxenI'm keen to find out more as well.
FYI - WG's been around a bit..he's one of the resident carb gurus.
And welcome to the site.:whistle:
And if I can find my dern calculator, I am going to check your formula in your profile section.
Let's see; I had that dang, thang last year, where is it....
I don't care if it does use reverse polish logic, it has to be good for something, even if it did only cost $800.
Post edited by: JimatMilkyWay, at: 2007/02/14 19:42
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- wiredgeorge
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=42292
I cut the battery clips off and soldered a DC two pin male/female connector in place. On the side where the clips had been, I put some loops on the cable ends and tinned them and put them under the battery leads. I ran wires off them to the new connector so that it will poke out from under the right hand sidecover. I mounted the part of the charger that the cord comes off on a post near where the bike is parked so it would be convenient to plug it in. I will stuff the connector under the sidecover when not in use.
Post edited by: wiredgeorge, at: 2007/02/14 21:44
wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
www.wgcarbs.com
Too many bikes to list!
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- JimatMilkyWay
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 285
- Thank you received: 12
Sounds like a good, clean install. Will be a good test case.....I cut the battery clips off and soldered a DC two pin male/female connector in place....
I would like to think that charger technology has advanced such that they do not eat the batteries lunch in the long haul.
I don't think lead acid batteries were ever plagued with "memory" discharge issues as, allegedly were some other types. Any of you battery gurus know if it is a good/bad idea to occasionally exercise the battery by taking it down to a low charge state, then charge as usual?
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- RonKZ650
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 3704
- Thank you received: 241
Probably more likely "floating" means it "floated" over here from China and is basically a 12VDC power supply that you'd be lucky if it even actually does anything.
321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- loudhvx
- Offline
- KZr Legend
- Posts: 10864
- Thank you received: 1615
...
Probably more likely "floating" means it "floated" over here from China and is basically a 12VDC power supply that you'd be lucky if it even actually does anything.
Heh, Harbor Freight definitley helps China's GNP.
It doesn't take a lot of sophistication to charge a battery. If you take an old "dumb" charger from the 1970's or so, and put a voltmeter on the leads, without a battery, I'd be surprised if the voltage was much over 12 volts. It works on pulses of voltage, so the average voltage is low, but the pulses are probably close to 16 volts or higher. A volt meter measures average-voltage, so it's not a good device to see what is really happening on an unconnected charger. When you connect it to the battery, the battery smoothes out the pulses and holds the voltage above 12v. A meter on the battery will then show between 13 and 15v. The battery holds 13v and the pulses from the charger add a volt or 2. All of this is easily seen on an oscilloscope.
If you want to see the effects of the charger, you should use an in-line amp meter. It will measure the average current into the battery, which is really what you want to know.
As Jim mentioned, amp meters can be blown up if hooked up wrong, so be careful!
As the average voltage of the battery climbs, the pulses don't drive as much current into the battery. But, because the transformer in the charger is an inductor, the current never drops to zero, so you eventually have to turn the charger off or you will over-charge the battery. "Smart" tenders shut off automatically, probably based on the battery voltage or on the reduction of charging current.
If you want to make a trickle charger out of a normal charger, you can just put a 2 ohm, 10 watt resistor in line. It will drop a 2 amp float charger to about .1 amp or so. Use 10 ohms if you really want a tiny trickle. To measure the average current, just put a voltmeter on the resistor, and divide the voltage by the resistance. Then you'll know what the average current really is.
(I recommend the high wattage resistor in case it goes into a higher current mode.)
Post edited by: loudhvx, at: 2007/02/15 23:34
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.