Testing Lead Acid's

Old car batteries as a power source

I have four old lead acid batteries stored in the garage.


An Enduroline 51913 20AH Gel Battery – the old one from my BMW motorcycle – about 7 years old. Replaced as starting became laboured

An Alphaline MF54459 44AH car battery bought around 10 years ago for a caravan

A PowerMax 85 leisure battery that came with our Motorhome I guess the garage fitted it so it will be 9 years old

A Peugeot L5D 95AH starter battery from our motorhome – The date on the battery indicates it was made in 2012

All of these batteries have been retired for some time but I keep them in the garage and charge them up every 3-6 months.

This is the technique I used to measure the capacity of these batteries:-

  1. Charge the battery fully on my Ctek charger
  2. Connect a load across the battery designed to take around 25% of the battery over 4-5 hours (based on the C20 capacity of the battery)
  3. Disconnect the load and leave the battery overnight.
  4. Measure the open circuit voltage and use this to deduce the state of charge.
  5. From the state of charge and the known drain, calculate the capacity of the battery.

To be honest, I don’t know if this is a sound method, but it seems logical to me.

The following table from here shows the charge vs o/c voltage from a new AGM battery.

State of Charge (%) o/c Voltage

But maybe it’s not so straight forward:-

Lead acid comes with different plate compositions that must be considered when measuring SoC by voltage. Calcium, an additive that makes the battery maintenance-free, raises the voltage by 5–8 percent. In addition, heat raises the voltage while cold causes a decrease. Surface charge further fools SoC estimations by showing an elevated voltage immediately after charge; a brief discharge before measurement counteracts the error. Finally, AGM batteries produce a slightly higher voltage than the flooded equivalent.

from here

The Alphline has a Calcium additive and the Euroline is an AGM battery.

100 12.83
90 12.72
80 12.6
70 12.47
60 12.34
50 12.2
40 12.06
30 11.91
20 11.76
10 11.61

Using a bit of analysis it looks like 1% reduction in o/c voltage corresponds to a 10% reduction in capacity down to around 30%.

Results

Battery L5D Power
Max
Alpha
line
Enduro
line
Type Flooded ??? Calcium AGM
New AH 95 70 44 20
Age (Years) 10 9 10 7
C20 Current 4.75 3.5 2.2 1
Voltage 4 hr after charge 12.58 12.82 12.87 12.87
Bulb used 55 55 24 10
Current 4.6 4.6 2.0 0.8
Hrs 4 4 4 3.5
AH taken 18.3 18.3 8.0 2.9
Voltage 24hr after discharge 12.25 12.35 12.58 10.66
drop in o/c voltage 2.62% 3.67% 2.25% 17.17%
drop in capacity 26.2% 36.7% 22.5%  
Estimated present Capacity in AH 70 44 34 3??
Compared to new 74% 63% 77% 0%

The 10 year old L5D starter battery still has 74% of it’s original capacity.  It’s cranking capability is is known to be suspect. But that is unimportant as a stand by supply.

The 9 year old PowerMax leisure battery is down to 63%. It was sold as a leisure battery. 

The 10 year old Alphaline starter battery is at 77%. 

The 7 year old Enduroline motorcycle battery is knackered.  I took only 2.9Ah from it and the voltage dropped unacceptably. 

Now if we have power cuts, I can use them separately or parallel the three usable batteries (using Schottky diodes to stop circulating currents), and I have 150Ah, or 1.8Kwh to play with.

I have a small inverter 300W inverter so I could power TVs and a few lamps for a few hours

But rather than lug the batteries from the garage into the house, I could put the inverter in the Garage and run an extension lead into the house.

I could even power the gas central heating boiler  for a few hours as it only uses 52W.

Conclusions

Old Batteries are a viable source of backup power.  They can be maintained by occasional charges, every few months,

Starter motors in cars and vans get replaced when their cranking capability is reduced so that they struggle to start the vehicle.  But there may still be plenty of storage capacity left to use as emergency backup in times of power cuts or as a leisure battery.  I wish I had done this test before buying my latest leisure battery for my motorhome I would just have used the starter battery.  One lives and learns. The van seemed to struggling a little this winter Maybe I’ll drop a new battery in at the beginning of next winter – the old one will be heading for the garage to join the collection.

One thing is for sure, I will never throw an old starter battery away again – especially in the current energy supply situation.







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