What brand do you folks prefer if you want
to buy the most reliable deep-cycle single
cells (not batteries)?
Which chemical type (lead-acid, nickel-metal
hydride, etc.)?
Rick
Depends on load, climate, charging equipment.
No single answer with your lack of information.
Supply all the details so you can be given informed information for the
application.
> What brand do you folks prefer if you want
> to buy the most reliable deep-cycle single
> cells (not batteries)?
> Which chemical type (lead-acid, nickel-metal
> hydride, etc.)?
> Rick
@news-server.bigpond.net.au:
> Depends on load, climate, charging equipment.
>
> No single answer with your lack of information.
>
> Supply all the details so you can be given informed information for the
> application.
>
>
<snip>
Sorry for the delay getting back to you: I lost the
browser bookmark that I was going to list and I had to
go find it again.
I am working on a different version of a circuit mentioned
in a paper from the University of Washington. To find a
PDF copy of the paper, go to this web site:
http://www.cheetah-charger.com/index.html
Click on the link which says:
Pulse Technology! An Advanced Charging Technique
You'll see a paragraph which starts:
"Read the article on Advanced Battery Charging Techniques by Tho
Nguyen...."
Click on the PDF symbol below that paragraph to obtain a PDF
copy of the paper that describes the technique I'm curious
about.
I'm wanting to charge individual cells at a rate between 8AH
and 20 AH per DAY. I'll then find some way to conveniently
discharge them over the weekend (automotive flourescent trouble
light over my desk while I'm at my computer?! They'd be
connected in series as a 12volt battery for that purpose.)
Thanks for any suggestion, ideas.
Rick
> to buy the most reliable deep-cycle single
> cells (not batteries)?
> Which chemical type (lead-acid, nickel-metal
> hydride, etc.)?
> Rick