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Subject Topic: battery charger Post Reply Post New Topic
20/3/2019 at 9:49am
 Location: chadderton oldham
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hi folks i am looking for advice about battery charging, i got two leisure batteries 140 amps with one on the caravan and one spare.When off grid i use an inverter to charge me mobility scooter, tv etc so i want a decent charger to recharge them, cost comes into it but i prefer to spent on a decent one. Any advice i be grateful thanks for your time EM


20/3/2019 at 10:30am
 Location:  Wales
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Most people recommend CTEK smart chargers

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73 going on 25
Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder



20/3/2019 at 12:02pm
 Location: East Herts
 Outfit: 1992 Elddis Wisp 450CT + X Trail
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I have an Aldi smart charger. In my opinion every bit as good as the CTEK ones, but much cheaper. Only snag is they don't always have them in stock so you have to grab one when they do. Mine cost me £13 and it does a great job.


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Best Regards,
Colin


20/3/2019 at 1:07pm
 Location: West Yorkshire
 Outfit: Bessacarr Cameo 625 2011
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CTEK chargers are very good - there is range, but make sure its suits the batteries i.e. AGM setting if needed.

Whilst away, how about a solar panel too top things up?


20/3/2019 at 4:51pm
 Location: chadderton oldham
 Outfit: skoda yeti 4x4 laurin klement
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THANK YOU FOLKS you have answered me question aldi has got none on offer now so i will go for ctek. once again thank you very much for taking your time to answer me
               EM


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via mobile 20/3/2019 at 5:06pm
 Location: N Wales
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My local Aldi has them is stock and sodid Lidl last time I looked. I have got the Lidl version and it is fine. However if you are looking at charging a large battery and for a critical application. I would look for something with a faster recharge rate at least 10Amps. I have had one of these for years. Numax 10amp charger. There may be better out there but this has always worked for me.


via mobile 20/3/2019 at 5:08pm
 Location: Dartford Kent
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.... what voltage is your scooter? I’m always wary when anyone talks about using an inverter. If you’re scaling up to 240v, only to go down to 12v again, that’s a lot of loss. Unless I’m mistaken, can’t you just use jump leads to transfer a charge? Others will have a better idea I’m sure.


21/3/2019 at 3:43am
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i would buy a charger with at least a 20 amp output..

spent at least £50 on one..

trog


22/3/2019 at 1:46am
 Location: North Wales
 Outfit: Elddis
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I have two Lidi chargers, and as an experiment I recharged my 75 Ah leisure battery with it plugged into an energy monitor wifi connected to PC so I could see when it switched to each stage. It starts at 3.8A next is 3A then 0.8A then 0.1A and it will if a really good battery or small battery actually switch off.

As to speed what is interesting is how long it charges at full 3.8A and within 15 minutes it had switched from 3.8A to 3A, it then charged at 3A for around a day before dropping to 0.8A and that took another 8 hours before it reached final stage at 0.1A.

This was quite a surprise, I had expected the 3.8A charge rate to have been held for a few hours, but it's not the ability of the charger that extends the time, but the ability of the battery to absorb the energy that determines how long it takes.

I now have a VRLA that was on the car, and as yet not really discharged it enough to fully test, however it does seem to accept the charge quicker and does remain on the 3.8A rate for longer.

But it does not really matter if the charger starts at 3.8A or 38A if that stage is really short, then looking at less than 5 minutes difference in charging times, as it's the battery that limits the charge accepted rather than the charger.

Clearly if you a prepared to top up the battery and expect a short life then as with fork lifts one can really bang in the charge, and get away with just 8 hours on charge, but to fully charge with a charger which will not boil the battery i.e. one safe to use with VRLA then your looking at 2 days.

I had problems with the mobility scooter, that also has a stage charger and before going away I plugged the charger into a 150W inverter and it charged fine, however after the scooter had been used, the charger wanted to use over 150W and the inverter simply closed down, I did not have a bigger inverter so had to find a mains supply to charge it from.

I think the mobility scooter has two 20 Ah batteries, so even with no losses it would need 40 Ah to charge, with loses more like 60 Ah so in real terms can't really expect to charge it from your leisure battery. Neither can you hope to charge it from a cig lighter as a cig lighter can't deliver enough power. The other problem was the mobility scooter has to be built up to charge, you can't simply charge the batteries off the scooter, although my car could carry it built up, most can't so very hard to charge while travelling.

I see no good reason why you should not be able to remove the battery for charging just like I do with the electric bike, and with the electric bike there is an option between fast chargers and standard chargers, but at the time of using the scooter I could not find a unit able to charge batteries off the scooter.    


22/3/2019 at 2:00am
 Location: North Wales
 Outfit: Elddis
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Quote: Originally posted by morepints on 20/3/2019
.... what voltage is your scooter? I’m always wary when anyone talks about using an inverter. If you’re scaling up to 240v, only to go down to 12v again, that’s a lot of loss. Unless I’m mistaken, can’t you just use jump leads to transfer a charge? Others will have a better idea I’m sure.


Not with the scooter I had, one it is 24 volt, and two no access to the battery it has a multi connector that connects to scooter and only way to charger is with batteries fitted to scooter and scooter plugged in.

At least with the electric bike you can charge the battery off the bike, but then looking at a 36 volt battery that is LiIon 400 Wh so needs around 35 Ah to charge it without losses, for the bike you can get a 12 volt charger, at around £80, so in real terms yes transform to 230 volt then back down to 36 volt. OK it means an inverter driving an inverter but still the most cost effective way.


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via mobile 22/3/2019 at 7:27am
 Location: N Wales
 Outfit: Hymer Nova 590GL
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Re the current Aldi and Lidl chargers. I think that this is the right way round but the Lidl version is now 5amps and Aldi 3.5amps the difference in cost is £1. I would still get a higher output charger if I needed to charge a battery reasonably quickly. If you don’t mind taking 3 days to charge a battery then I’m sure a lower output charger would be fine.


22/3/2019 at 10:14am
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two 140 amp batteries need something more than a silly micky mouse aldi type charger..

trog





22/3/2019 at 12:23pm
 Location: North Wales
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With three 140 Ah batteries on a narrow boat the charger was good for 35 amp, it had three modes, float, AGM and flooded and in flooded mode one had to top up the batteries every two weeks.

Although we assume lead acid, we don't know what breed of lead acid, and to keep battery light enough to carry it may well be AGM or other name is VRLA, these batteries can not be topped up, once dried out all you can do is weigh them in.

So you can speed up charging, but to do so needs a very cleaver battery charger that pulses charge into the battery and works out state of charge by how quickly the battery voltage decays between each pulse.

So there is a massive jump between £15 for a Lidi charger, and the £300 for a charger able to without damaging the battery charge it in a short time.

The same problem charging a battery from the car, with a float charge a battery may take 50 amp just after starting, but within a very short time it's down to 5 amp if that.

So Lidi or Aldi is less than £20 and to better that the Ctek caravan battery charger XS 25000 charger is around £589 from Amazon, that is a huge jump in price.

Remember Ctek make many chargers, some are not as good as the Lidi one as does not have voltmeter built in, and others are really good, there is a reason why Ctek make the XS 25000 for caravans, if a MSX 5.0 was good enough they would not make the XS 25000.

So difference is time, the XS 25000 is faster, but throughout history we have tried to fast charge lead acid batteries for fork lifts and milk floats and they needed 10 hours to charge even with 100 amp stage chargers. You can bang in 80% in 6 hours but unless you actually fully charge once a week the battery will not last long.

There have always been Nickel Iron batteries used on buses and milk tankers that can charge fast, today we have the NiMh and Ni/ion batteries again fast charge, be it my electric bike or phone these batteries can charge fast.

But lead acid move from 3.5 amp to 35 amp and the larger charger is not even twice as fast in many cases, as the battery simply can't take the charge that fast, and have a reasonable life.


23/3/2019 at 10:33am
 Location: chadderton oldham
 Outfit: skoda yeti 4x4 laurin klement
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Thank you folks for your time and effort i went to a few electrial shops and decide to buy a ring charger. As trog suggested 20 amp but as the cost of one,It cost £47 and it seems to do the job and i also bought a volt meter so i can see what is in the batteries now .Thank you all for your time and effort
                 EM


24/3/2019 at 12:35pm
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these look a nice product.. i have just bought one to charge my truck batteries..

trog

ps.. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Smart-Battery-Charger-Car-Caravan-Motorbike-Boat-Trickle-2-10-20amp-12v-24v/191797142148?_trkparms=aid%3D111001%26algo%3DREC.SEED%26ao%3D1%26asc%3D20160727114228%26meid%3D09cba73f97ee4863b6715bb241cdc041%26pid%3D100290%26rk%3D1%26rkt%3D4%26mehot%3Dag%26sd%3D191797142148%26itm%3D191797142148&_trksid=p2060778.c100290.m3507

Post last edited on 24/03/2019 13:12:47


28/3/2019 at 11:22am
 Location: North Wales
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Be it a Lidi or Ctek or any other charger, for use with a caravan you don't want to have to select a function and press any start button.

It seems many Ctek chargers will return to full output when required, and restart charging after a power cut without needing to press a button.

But the Lidi charger I have will not return to 3.8A output or restart charging unless you press a button. This is actually good for bench charging as if a battery goes faulty it will not charge over 0.8 amp and if it becomes disconnected it fails safe.

However although carried as a spare for caravan, it would not replace the built in charger as it would soon default to 0.8 amp and never return to 3.8 amp.

Also it auto detects 6 volt batteries, which means under 7.5 volt it sees battery as 6 volt so fails to charge it, many of the Ctek can't charge 6 volt batteries, so the battery voltage can drop to around 3.5 volt and it will still recharge it.

The upper voltage is also a problem, once the Lidi charger has completed the pulse charge stage as it switches to 3.8A (set to large battery) or 0.8A (set to small battery) the voltage can spike above 15 volt (I think) at which point it thinks battery disconnected and switches off.

Although the features on the Lidi charger can be seen as a fault in design, they do mean it is safe to set an leave, as it fails safe. It also has a built in volt meter so you can see what is going on. If your going to try and bring back to life a sulphated battery it takes a long time, days or even weeks, so your not monitoring the battery, if it has a faulty cell, when the other cells recover, you don't want it to over charge produce hydrogen gas dry out battery and then spark lighting the gas and exploding. The design of the Lidi battery charger would not let this happen, can't really fault it for that.

With the built in battery charger for caravan I have smelt it when it went wrong and a cell shorted and turned it off, however unless you not only smell it but also realise what you are smelling (bad egg smell) then there could be a big bang.



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