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02-27-2007, 11:48 PM | #1 |
God Bless Mr. T
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Minot, ND
Posts: 348
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Re: Optima Red vs. Yellow
Optima is a gell cell battery. When testing/charging them, a setting has to be changed on the machin to gell cell. That is how our Sabre and PowerLogic testers are.
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Like a midget at a urinal...sometimes you must stay on your toes. |
02-28-2007, 12:43 PM | #2 |
Living In The Past
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Rockies
Posts: 709
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Re: Optima Red vs. Yellow
I dont understand the charger issue. If you cant use a regular charger then how come your regular alternater will charge them? (Not doubting just want to know why)
I did not realize the yellow was deep cycle either. But a guy I know who runs a tree service uses a yellow top in his electric dump trailer for a number of years now and swears by them so when the lift gate on my service truck started killing batteries I switched to yellow top and havent had another issue, so I dont understand not using them for heavy drains like suggested because they have been working great for me and my friend. On anothe note the first one I bought at costco and it could not even start my truck the first time. I took it back and got another one with a different date code that was fine and is what I am still using Last edited by Olden Days; 02-28-2007 at 12:44 PM. |
02-28-2007, 11:00 PM | #3 |
Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: NW, WA.
Posts: 1,421
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Re: Optima Red vs. Yellow
Olden Days,
Lifting a dump bed/gate does not take as long as a winching job so used for that configuration your I think your ok. It comes down to the AMP draw of the Hydro Pump your running while under load. Most 12V Hydro pumps like that are not rated for continious use anyway and I'm sure you don't run the gate up and down 40 times a hour. It takes my dump bed about 15 sec to reach full up and I'm guessing about the same for a lift gate. Do you have a series-wound pump motor? A quote from the tech article: "The deep-cycle has thick plates, and is intended for deep discharge over a long period of time, not deep discharge at high current. If you're running your headlights 'till it's dead, the deep-cycle will survive more charge/discharges, but DC's can't handle high-current without damage... and sometimes they'll explode. Use the high-CCA battery- its internal resistance is lower. Deep cycles don't do high discharge rates... they'll push a 10A load for days, but don't like pushing a 100A load for more than a minute... For the most part, winches draw insignificant amounts of power until you load 'em up... Can't remember when, but there's been pull-offs in some of the 4x mags, and they show no-load speed and current. As you noted, winches with higher pull ratings will draw less current at a given load because of that reduction... but if you get a high-pull winch with FAST retrieval rate, you'll have some pretty high current draw. You'll also find that shunt-wound motors draw more current than series-wound under stall condition, while blah blah blah, but what it all boils down to... is that a fast, high-load pull requires more power, while a slow, high-load pull draws less... it's that Power=Work*Time thing & Work = Force * Distance." |
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