IT LIVES !!
The thing I like about this web site is the good advice. I believe ALL of you are right, at least in context.
Charge one at a time with your 12v charger. No need to disconnect anything.
Speaking as an engineer, doghead is absolutely right, as long as everything is turned off. If you have the time, a day per battery, do it, but on some schedule clean all your battery connections. This is good advice for your Volks Wagen, too.
My reason for thinking about switching to 12v is because I had several opportunities to jump to a 12v including a Kenworth. I also was offered a boost starter, 12v of course. In civilization, that is well and good; I bought a 40 amp Stanley charger, 12v of course, and I can deal with it by taking only 2 battery connectors off.
But what am I going to do if I’m clear up at Holy Terror Reservoir, which is a 10 mile walk to a tow-truck-passable road? I’m 66 with bad hips and that would kill me.
I think if I’m really worried about that, I will come up with extra batteries. Has anyone out there had a back-woods incident with dead batteries?
I am trying to put together a rule-of-thumb about batteries and charging times. It looks like on these big military batteries it takes somewhere between 75 and 100 amp-hours to charge one from dead to topped off. That means 6 amps per battery for 12 to 15 hours or 10 amps per battery for 8 to 10 hours. With my 40 amp charger, that is 8 to 10 hours with the whole bunch wired in parallel. The charger I used hadn’t finished after 8 hours when I unhooked it and started the truck this morning. It cranked for a good 30 seconds before it caught and started and it was still going strong.
Leaving a truck with good batteries unattended for 13 months
is bad. I didn’t intend to leave it more than 2 months, but my project got canceled and I was the last contractor in. There was nobody here in Texas I trusted to mess with the truck and we kept saying “this month we’ll go down there.”
Last word and I will go away; my truck came from GL with Michelin 11.00 R20 XL tires on the ground, radials, and an NDT, biased ply, in the spare rack. I am guessing that the truck was upgraded from NDTs all around but they didn’t change out the spare. I will be traveling with one tire and wheel missing on the right side of the intermediate axle because you can’t mix a radial with a biased ply; both tires will be damaged, according to a tire guy I trust. We will starting out as Sunday from Dublin, TX to Denver, CO, pulling an M101A2 trailer and expect to take 3 days. I’m happy with the way the truck runs and I don’t expect problems. It did well 13 months ago from Ft. Benning, GA and this is just the last leg.
Happy New Year !!!!
Arlyn