Saturday, Mar 04, 2017 at 10:12
Alan that is simply not true, go to any manufacturers website, they all indicate you can fully charge their batteries
well below 14.6V, generally accepted float charge voltages are 13.5V or there abouts.
Industry float charge their batteries at less than that to maximise battery life.
This has been done to death before, increased voltage just reduces charge times.
As above you only need a voltage higher than the fully charged terminal voltage of the battery and to over come itself discharge to fully charge it.
I love these forums, one minute they argue that car manufactures have lowered the charge voltage to 13.5V to prevent overcharging the battery and maximise its life. Next minute its you need at least 14.6V to fully charge a battery. Car recharging systems have been fully charging batteries from at around 14.4V - 14.4V since batteries were put in cars. These voltages were selected as they give rapid recharge times whilst still maintaining a good service life.
From Optimas website as I had it open at the time:
Recommended charging inforamtion:
Alternator:
13.3 to 15.0 volts, no amperage limit.
Battery Charger:
13.8 to 15.0 volts, 10 amps maximum, approximately for six to twelve hours.
Rapid Recharge:
Maximum voltage 15.6 volts (regulated), no current limit as long as battery temperature remains below 125°F (51.7°C). Charge until current drops below one amp.
Float Charge:
13.2 to 13.8 volts, one amp maximum current, time indefinite (at lower voltage).
Strictly adhere to all limits.
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