markejackson02 Posted August 14, 2017 Report Posted August 14, 2017 I have a Gill G-35 battery in a 201. The hangar in which the plane sits is regularly 100-120 degrees this time of year. I keep the water topped up and use a battery minder. Is there anything else I can do to keep the battery from getting torched? 1 Quote
RLCarter Posted August 14, 2017 Report Posted August 14, 2017 Cold temps are harder on batteries, but I feel your pain during the hotter months Quote
Greg_D Posted August 14, 2017 Report Posted August 14, 2017 What kind of "battery minder" are you using ? If it isn't an aviation specific model, you may be doing more harm than good. Quote
N6758N Posted August 14, 2017 Report Posted August 14, 2017 1 hour ago, markejackson02 said: I have a Gill G-35 battery in a 201. The hangar in which the plane sits is regularly 100-120 degrees this time of year. I keep the water topped up and use a battery minder. Is there anything else I can do to keep the battery from getting torched? Remove the Gill and install a Concorde. 2 Quote
markejackson02 Posted August 14, 2017 Author Report Posted August 14, 2017 14 minutes ago, Greg_D said: What kind of "battery minder" are you using ? If it isn't an aviation specific model, you may be doing more harm than good. It is the Gill specific BatteryMinder unit. I believe it is the S2. I used to use the aviation specific unit that allowed you to pick battery type and amperage. It was constantly resetting itself so I would come back to the AGM battery setting at 2 amps. Finally tossed it which was annoying given the $250 price tag. Quote
markejackson02 Posted August 14, 2017 Author Report Posted August 14, 2017 4 minutes ago, N6758N said: Remove the Gill and install a Concorde. Is there any issue with the battery box? My current one has two sets of ridges that look like they are designed to hold the battery caps in place. Quote
N6758N Posted August 14, 2017 Report Posted August 14, 2017 8 minutes ago, markejackson02 said: Is there any issue with the battery box? My current one has two sets of ridges that look like they are designed to hold the battery caps in place. There shouldn't be, especially the 14v installations. The best part about the Concorde is you don't have to worry about the excess heat causing it to leak and spill corrosive fluid in your airplane. Its pretty much maintenance free. Fly it once a month and you don't even need to worry about a battery minder. Quote
ArtVandelay Posted August 15, 2017 Report Posted August 15, 2017 I have a Gill G-35 battery in a 201. The hangar in which the plane sits is regularly 100-120 degrees this time of year. I keep the water topped up and use a battery minder. Is there anything else I can do to keep the battery from getting torched? You do use distilled water?If you fly often enough you don't need the BM, you should check your voltage level to make its being charged fully. I went to harbor freight and pick up a charger for $29, use it whenever I have playing with the plane in the hangar (DB updates, etc). Quote
markejackson02 Posted August 15, 2017 Author Report Posted August 15, 2017 1 hour ago, teejayevans said: You do use distilled water? If you fly often enough you don't need the BM, you should check your voltage level to make its being charged fully. I went to harbor freight and pick up a charger for $29, use it whenever I have playing with the plane in the hangar (DB updates, etc). I do use distilled water. I try to fly at least once a week. The battery minder may be overkill. If this one turns out to be dead (will check tomorrow), maybe try the Concorde. Quote
StevenL757 Posted August 15, 2017 Report Posted August 15, 2017 Mark - all things being equal, and assuming you're doing the right things with BAT maintenance and upkeep (which appears you are), I agree with others that the Concorde solution is the best way to go. I've owned several of each brand in a few airplanes, and the Concordes have clearly been the better performer in all cases. You shouldn't need the BatterMinder if you fly once ever 7-10 days, as any flight over 45 mins will charge the battery sufficiently. My present pair of Concordes in the Ovation are on their 5th year of use (installed 2/2013), and both passed capacity testing with 89% (BAT1) and 97% (BAT2) at annual in June. I don't own a BatteryMinder, fly at least once per week, but occasionally have gone as much as 10 days (gasp) without flying. Never had an issue. Good luck. Let us know what you find out; and please give a PIREP, should you choose the Concorde. :-) Steve Quote
N6758N Posted August 15, 2017 Report Posted August 15, 2017 @Marauder was at 9 years on his Concorde and still going strong when he decided to replace it for other reasons. I'm pretty sure he uses a battery maintainer, and he also flies regularly. Quote
Marauder Posted August 15, 2017 Report Posted August 15, 2017 [mention=9886]Marauder[/mention] was at 9 years on his Concorde and still going strong when he decided to replace it for other reasons. I'm pretty sure he uses a battery maintainer, and he also flies regularly. It was actually 13 years. He would have kept going if it wasn't for Magilla Gorilla who overtorqued the positive lead and stripped the threads.I do fly regularly but also do use the BatteryMinder on a regular basis -- especially in the winter.Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro 1 Quote
ArtVandelay Posted August 15, 2017 Report Posted August 15, 2017 The problem with batteries is they can die a quick death without any warning (either type), so if you are going to be traveling and it's been awhile, might want to preemptively swap them out. Quote
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