Sunday, June 20, 2010
Storage Battery Exerciser
As soon as the battery voltage drops below this value, the comparator goes Low and D6 is cut off, allowing the second astable multivibrator IC1.C to oscillate at approximately 1.2 Hz. LED D7 then blinks to indicate that the battery must be charged. As long as the battery voltage is greater than 11 V, IC1.B is High. IC1.A is Low most of the time, and in this state D4 conducts and the inverting input of IC1.D is Low. This means that IC1.D is High most of the time, with T1 cut off. T1 only conducts during the 0.6-s intervals when IC1.A is High. In this state it allows current to pass through the lamp (12 V / 3 W), which forms the actual load for the battery. After this, darkness prevails again for 40 s. The average current consumption is approximately 5 mA. At this rate, a relatively new 40-Ah battery will take around one year to become fully discharged. However, this can vary depending on the condition of the battery, and it may be necessary to ‘top up’ the battery once during the winter.
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