Batteries and acid

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07 May 2007 07:08 #137843 by mariozappa
Batteries and acid was created by mariozappa
The last couple of batteries I bought were shipped to me dry, and then I went to wally world to buy the $3.00 bottle of acid.
When checking one of my batteries lately, the electrolyte level is down and the instructions say to add distilled water.
My question is: I still have some acid left over in the bottle, can I add that to the battery NOW instead of distilled water?

1977 KZ650C1
and the KZ650/KZ750 Conversion ;)

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07 May 2007 07:17 #137847 by Mcdroid
Replied by Mcdroid on topic Batteries and acid
Generally, no. If you originally filled the battery to the specified level with acid, all you should add afterwards is distilled H2O to maitain the electrolyte balance.

Post edited by: Mcdroid, at: 2007/05/07 10:17

Michael
Victoria, Texas

1982 GPz750
1977 KZ1000A
1978 KZ1000A
1982 GPz1100
1975 Z2A

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07 May 2007 08:10 #137865 by rstnick
Replied by rstnick on topic Batteries and acid
I agree. My last battery came dry with the acid in a separate bottle.
The instructions said to only add distilled water after the fact. Can't remember why, but followed the instructions.

Rob
CANADA

Need a key for your Kawasaki? PM me

1978 KZ650 C2, 130K kms, Delkevic ex, EI, CVK32, PMC easy clutch, ATK fork brace, steering damper, Progressive Suspension, braced swingarm, ZRX shocks, 18" Z1R front wheel.
2000 ZRX1100
2011 Ninja 250R - Wife's
2005 z750s
1978 KZ1000 project

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07 May 2007 09:21 #137885 by mariozappa
Replied by mariozappa on topic Batteries and acid
Thanks for the input. I didn't know if adding more of the acid a year later would mess up the electrolyte level or not.
That's probably why the instructions say to add distilled water! :whistle:
I had to ask...

1977 KZ650C1
and the KZ650/KZ750 Conversion ;)

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07 May 2007 10:23 #137908 by Patton
Replied by Patton on topic Batteries and acid
Here's my understanding --

Battery fluid is a mixture of water and sulfuric acid in the supposedly correct ratio of water to acid. Only the water component evaporates. The acid component does not evaporate. So the decrease in volume results from evaporation loss of water (with no loss of acid). Adding water only should re-establish the correct water-acid ratio. :)

1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD

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07 May 2007 11:15 #137918 by mariozappa
Replied by mariozappa on topic Batteries and acid
That does make sense.
I never thought of it that way, the water evaporating from the acid.

1977 KZ650C1
and the KZ650/KZ750 Conversion ;)

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07 May 2007 13:20 #137954 by BSKZ650
Replied by BSKZ650 on topic Batteries and acid
had a bud who did add new acid to his battery when it was low, I only remember him putting one battery in that bike and he rode it for years.
I didnt think it would work but he showed me

77 kz650, owned for over 25 years
77 ltd1000, current rider
76 kz900, just waiting
73 z1,, gonna restore this one
piglet, leggero harley davidson
SR, Ride captian, S.E.Texas Patriot Guard Riders.. AKA KawaBob

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07 May 2007 13:26 #137959 by mariozappa
Replied by mariozappa on topic Batteries and acid
Hmmmmmm

I feel a test coming on!
:evil:

1977 KZ650C1
and the KZ650/KZ750 Conversion ;)

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08 May 2007 05:55 #138111 by davenkids2001
Replied by davenkids2001 on topic Batteries and acid
Patton wrote:

Here's my understanding --

Battery fluid is a mixture of water and sulfuric acid in the supposedly correct ratio of water to acid. Only the water component evaporates. The acid component does not evaporate. So the decrease in volume results from evaporation loss of water (with no loss of acid). Adding water only should re-establish the correct water-acid ratio. :)



This is correct. I'm no battery expert but I have been working around power plants and prime movers for 30+ years. It is a HUGE NO-NO to add acid to a battery to top it off. Once the initial electrolyte level has been set only the water will evaporate...the acid will stay. Adding clean DISTILLED water (NOT tap water!) will keep your battery at it's peak chemical condition. Remember...the battery is a CHEMICAL device. Keeping the chemistry right, without trace elements like flourine, clorine, etc is best.
Here we ALWAYS use distilled or dionized water for our Diesel generator batteries.

Dave and Janet
Great Lake State
1979 650SR

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08 May 2007 11:20 #138217 by Patton
Replied by Patton on topic Batteries and acid
BATTERIES NEVER DIE . . . THEY ARE MURDERED! :ohmy:
i]Author Unknown[/i

1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD

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08 May 2007 19:14 #138379 by JR
Replied by JR on topic Batteries and acid
Speaking of distilled deionised water ................has anyone ever tried tasting it ? :sick: I could'nt believe it would taste as bad as it did.

1980 kz750E1, Delkevic exhaust

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09 May 2007 06:50 #138489 by wiredgeorge
Replied by wiredgeorge on topic Batteries and acid
If you add some lemonade packs to the distilled water, it tastes OK... probably doesn't do much good in the battery after that though...

wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
www.wgcarbs.com
Too many bikes to list!

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