Batteries die because the lead plates create a sulfate on the plates. Eventually the sulfates build up to the point that they no longer flow electrons . Cleaning may expose more of the lead and get the flow going again, but usually by this time the lead plates are pretty much used up, so even cleaning the sulfates and putting in new acid will not save it, it may have voltage but very low cranking amps. Another old trick was to overcharge the battery with a high amp charger which would cause the sulfates to flake off the plates, but this was only a temporary solution as well. When you've got no lead, your battery is dead.
8. THE. DUI GUY IS AGREAT SHOW I thank him for His Expertis in Cases he is incredible and Also THE Police are doing a great job in tuff situations depending on what they not knowing what that next assignment will be ie.minor or tragic but there's a lot to consider in 2 or 3 seconds it is a very tough Profession for Police as I was also a Public Safety Officer God Bless AllHTTPS//WWW.Mass.Gov>orgs> Office :any mail or correspondence for Robert T Moser Should be sent to address of56 St .. Joseph Street Fall river . MA 02723 PObox181is temporarily stopped last 4 1606 because of P.O.errorThank You very much. Sincerely Robert T Moser 56St. JOSEPH STREET Fall river Ma.02723 or call 508617-4622 Thank You very much.HTTPS//WWW.Mass.Gov>orgs> Office :any mail or correspondence for Robert T Moser Should be sent to address of56 St .. Joseph Street Fall river . MA 02723 PObox181is temporarily stopped last 4 1606 because of P.O.errorThank You very much. Sincerely Robert T Moser 56St. JOSEPH STREET Fall river Ma.02723 or call 508617-4622 Thank You very much.HTTPS//WWW.Mass.Gov>orgs> Office :any mail or correspondence for Robert T Moser Should be sent to address of56 St .. Joseph Street Fall river . MA 02723 PObox181is temporarily stopped last 4 1606 because of P.O.errorThank You very much. Sincerely Robert T Moser 56St. JOSEPH STREET Fall river Ma.02723 or call 508617-4622 Thank You very much.HTTPS//WWW.Mass.Gov>orgs> Office :any mail or correspondence for Robert T Moser Should be sent to address of56 St .. Joseph Street Fall river . MA 02723 PObox181is temporarily stopped last 4 1606 because of P.O.errorThank You very much. Sincerely Robert T Moser 56St. JOSEPH STREET Fall river Ma.02723 or call 508617-4622 Thank You very much.The Sopranos
Batteries are made with two types of oxides. This ia paiste made of sulfuric acud and lead. This paiste is called posive msterial which is then applied to the positive grid after drying to cure it then becomes a positive plate. This is where the battery gets its voktage .the negative plates are formed in much the same way .but chemicaly work differently.the positvive provide the voltage and the negative plates are there to carry the amperage from one plate to the next..
everything has a life and nothing beats new,esp batteries,i dont' know about most people but to me a car truck that won't go state to state, its not worth much,new batteries,new belts,new hoses,every 4 years,no matter what,oil changes every 3500x3 then go to 5000 x3 then back to 3500,keeping the pan clean is all of it,OLD SCHOOL you know nothing beats new or first design,the first anything was designed because the guy needed it,hang in there
Don't drop or rattle your battery too hard or the lead plates will dislodge and your fucked. You do want to slosh the baking soda/distilled water solution in the battery though, just not crazy hard. You know what I mean? Anyway this method worked fantastic with my battery. It's only 2 years old, but I don't use the vehicle very much. I did go to Harbor freight and buy a cheapo $10 trickle charger with the solar panel. I've heard good reviews on it, so I'll have to see. I payed $150+ for the stupid battery a couple years ago and it's already gone up to almost $200. This is January of 2024.
So many times over the past half century I've sniveled about the desert heat in Tucson, especially the humid monsoon heat but then I remind myself - Hey, at least it isn't Phoenix! Thanks for this video!
For some of the comments who are quick to go to the shop and replace or repair , Please such DIY are for people who find themselves off grid , imagine you are in Alaska or some very rural African place , this can really help. And again some people even if they may be located in big cities they still don’t have money to replace a battery .
Use sodium sulfate instead of epsom salt (Much gentler on the electrodes and does not heavily oxidize the positive plates when charging And it's even more conductive too) And it also has much higher output current than magnesium sulfate. Alum sulfate will also work as well. but its not the best choice. Just add about a tablespoon worth into each cell (Not too much!) This will raise the conductivity of the electrolyte if its weak. and also aid in forming the electrodes gently. re-forming the lead sulfates into lead and lead oxides. without over-oxidizing the positive plate like the magnesium sulfate/espom salt would I have had nothing but bad experience with magnesium sulfate and several tests ive done. it is simply too aggressive and attacks the positive electrode quite strongly. (it is fast at forming the lead oxides. but it will increase corrosion) No need to use any baking soda either or removing or replacing the electrolyte.. Just charge the battery with the sodium sulfate added to it for a long time at a low current and allow the voltage to rise to whatever it takes to accept that low current (Charge at about C1/100) Until the voltage is about 14-16v. Then the battery can be put on a normal charger and held in absorption (14.4-14.8v) for several additional hours. until the current has stabilized at a low value. Watch for heating of the battery. Take a measurement regularly if it starts warming up at any point. let it sit for several hours to cool completely. Regularly check the voltage and current as well. just to be sure theres no shorted cells or anything unusual happening You can also add about 1/8 teaspoon of boric acid or borax to each cell. as an additional additive. it creates a protective boron layer on the electrodes. specifically the negative. resistant to sulfation. if all else fails and you cannot revive the original sulfuric acid out of the lead sulfate stored in the plates. (Cannot raise the specific gravity) Only then may it be time to try replacing the electrolyte with an alternative such as alum. sodium sulfate. mixture. or baking soda (Possible electrolyte alternative could be washing soda or sodium carbonate. as it is the strongest alkaline electrolyte ive found that can still form the lead oxide in the plates. creating an almost super-capacitor like battery performance. Very tough and hard to kill. can be charged and discharged thousands of times with no damage. Deep discharge is completely harmless) You will get a significantly lower voltage though. between 8-11v so there is a drawback for going completely alkaline-for the electrolyte. PH will be roughly 10-11 if fully converted to alkaline.
After dumping out the baking soda water you should have rinsed the battery a couple times with water to get all that out of battery, then before adding any of your Epson salt concoction used a specific gravity tester to test the strength of your concoction to ensure proper strength 1st before adding any of it to your battery. Filter your used electrolyte and pour equal amounts into each cell and top up with your concoction. After adding the proper strength solution to battery, then put charger on deep cycle battery setting if you have that setting. A smart charger may do the same thing by charging at different rates until fully charged over a 24 hour period or longer. I have seen batteries after trying to fix them that showed 12.8 volts but as soon as I went to turn the engine over the battery went to 7 volts and would not turn the engine over. This indicates that simply charging to 12.3 or above doesn't always translate to the battery being fixed, especially if the battery originally went dead while below freezing and as such froze up and broke some plates inside the battery. I usually use the specific gravity tester in each cell to see which cell is showing weak solution and which are showing normal, I will remove with a suction device like a fluid transfer pump or just the bubble device I am using which is the specific gravity tester, until the fluid is below the plates in that cell. At this point the strong concoction of Epson salts and water can be added just to the specific cells that are showing they are below normal on the tester. This saves a lot of time and most of the original electrolyte gets to stay in the battery. After this I put the covers on the cells and charge for minimum of 24 hours and with all of this there is no guarantees the battery will ever function like a new battery. Prevention is still the best way to look after a battery, remove either it or 1 terminal when not in use for extended periods of time, recharge every 3 months, do not store on a concrete floor but rather on a bench or wood of some kind.
I have to agree with everything you said here with the exception of the concrete floor. This is a myth and a hold over fallacy from the days when car batteries had metal in their cases. New batteries up today have cases made entirely of plastic. You can put a brand new battery on the concrete floor in your shop and put another one on the wood counter and check them a month later there should be no difference whatsoever.
all your blabbing but its redundant. the PH of the acid will literally self balance with a charge. He could do all that but it bbn isnt neccessary on an old junky battery.
Go with spending the money on an Optima battery. I had one in my 2000 Montero for 11 years plus. When I had to scrap the car after my daughter let the coolant go way low and blew out one head gasket. I took the battery out and it is still working perfectly 5 years later! $325.00 Well spent as I probably would have had to change batteries 4 or 5 times during that 16 year period. ONE MAJOR BENEFIT ...gell pack batteries will not outgas or leak and cause rust in your classic Porsche 👌👍
I’ve got a yellow top optima gel battery and it’s still good and strong after 6-7 years now of being used and ran dead on several occasions as well as drained on several Saturday nights over them years in my dirt track car.
I retired from my last job manufacturing car batteries. The plates inside the battery look like fly swatters and then they are covered with a lead oxide paste. When this paste falls off the plates after so many years, there is no way to make your battery better. This guy is wasting his time.
Battery tender will constantly charge it, which means that the internals of the battery get warm, distilled water will evaporate, overall liquid levels will drop, acid concentration will be too high and cause corrosion on lead plates inside the battery - this results in a residue that will short circuit one or several of the canisters. Battery tender wont know that there is one faulty canister and will overcharge the other ones to reach the 12 volts. While doing that, it will further overheat the other canisters. The battery will start a car for one time or two and then it has lost its charge to 9v or lower. Also when one of the canister is shorted out or low on liquid, the battery will start boiling when alternator charges it. What the process in this video does is remove mentioned corrosion residue and clean the plates. Then refill with clean acid or salt water. It helps but some of the plate material is still gone and its not comparable to a new battery. Its OK for warm climate areas and petrol cars but not high cranking current demanding diesel cars. Battery tender will work too without any issues but only if you check the liquid levels and top up with distilled water - of course if the caps on the canisters can be removed - on most newer batteries they cant because battery manufacturers use ultrasonic welding to make the covers not removable so that you would have to buy a new battery instead 🤓
That’s what i was thinking, where was the load test, you can surface charge just about any lead acid battery.. load test the fooker to it full CCAs and then show us..
@@formosabrowning3539 at my workshop, we managed to charge a four lemons to show 12volts, We were Successful in lighting a tiny LED bulb on a test light for about 40 seconds.. (did I technically recondition the lemon). 😂
@@ArrowheadGarage I have heard of white vinegar on top of 1/4th.cup of baking soda per cell . Then add your mix of epsom salt, wash it out extensively with several fillings with water, drain completely, then add back the settled acid, Why did you not add back the acid, only a charged battery holds the electrolytes in the plates, a discharged one has 80% of the acid in the liquid. Can you say why u did not add acid
Drain battery and flush it with a garden hose, then one rinse with distilled water. That dislodges any particles of plate material that build up on the bottom of the n battery and might be causing slight internal short circuits between the plates
Yes a load test will check to see if you can pull a load. Easier yet. Let battery sit overnight and recheck voltage. If voltage drops it’s not going to work. But a load test is better. But if you don’t have a tester check voltage and recheck 24-30 hrs later. If it drops from 12.6- 12.0 it’s not going to work . Nice video . But remember to load test it as well or sit and watch for voltage drop.
Thanks for trying this out .Other attempts suggest that Epsom salts will result in a battery that will only give 9 volt but last for over five teen years .That is interesting for making large static battery banks for off grid use where 48 volts is wanted do 5 of these 9 volt batteries will give the 45 volts which works for them .The upside with salt battery it seems they don't get damaged from total discharge but they don't preform well under large loads . Many You tubes on Epsom salt replacements .Also in third world many RUclips's on how to melt the lead plates and remake new battery using acid systems . LSO many you tubes an using welder equipment with 200 amps to boil battery in five minute bursts until battery works again . I have yet to see a 12 volt Epsom salt battery return 12 volt solutions for any interesting time periods so very interested for your results now 11 months on .Can it supply cranking power to start gasoline engine .I don't mind to gang together several to get cranking power for my 13 HP marine engine on my boat and for domestic us . Li thuim ion ferros oxide phosporn type Li Fe PO4 has problems with cost and expensive chargers and cold temperature charging and high temperature s and Alternator charging in marine use . Lead crystal battery costs per cycle is also a problem . We need more people to do these experiments to see if we can rescue lead acid batteries to keep from forkingbout big bucks every few years especially in warm countries where lead acid batteries have much shorter lives than temoerate regions
you need to remove your Epsom Salt water rinse it good, and filter your aced you drained out put it back with a little Epsom Salt in each cell then charge it heavy then see what you get, works better that way.
Before you start your procedure hold the battery upside down about 6-8" inches above the pavement and drop it a time or two...If the posts aren't recessed zip tie a piece of wood to it first... sounds crazy but trust me.
I just saw a clip with a doctor recommending drinking the same to purify your stomach.... 1 Litre distilled water, 1 tsp baking soda, 1 tsp sea salt. Divide in 4 and drink every 2'nd hour... Makes sense 😂 Tip: The distilled water is polluted when poring it in a "bucket" like that...
Back in the early 80's I worked for a used battery service' the owner had a contract with JCPenney's/Sears Kmart to buy all their old batteries' we'd pour all the old acid water out and use a 50/50 mixture of white distilled cleaning vinegar to wash them out then rinse out and repeat' fill with new acid' place them on the charging tables' up to 200/250 batteries at a time' hook them up all together in parallel and charge them on 2 amps for 3 days' then let them sit for a week off charge' about 25% of them would not hold charge' the ones that did' we were selling them for $15.00/$20.00/$25.00 depending on appearance' some would last a couple of months some would last for years. Slow charge is the key after cleaning and new acid.
@@pawtaylor Back then the majority had caps' there were a few that were sealed' on those we had to peel the manufacturer label off the top of the battery and under the label there were caps' they were recessed and sat flush with the top of the battery' on some you could see a small hairline crack between the cap and top of the battery' a small flathead screwdriver or pocket knife and pry them out. On others you could see the outline of the seal' on those we had to take a utility knife and cut into the outline of the seal to separate the cap from the battery and then pry it out. I remember being in the lower shop and all the sudden BAMM!!! Sound like a cannon had went off from the charging process' I could feel the battery acid on my face and arms from being in the air' there was a couple of times they blew a hole clean through the tin roof of the charging area.
I buy those jogs of sulfuric acid from any auto parts store, and then drain and refill. Now this has worked for say, 6 out of 10 batteries I've tried, and my best guess for the bad ones, is damage to cells, or extreme contamination since I've never 'rinsed' or cleaned any of them. Using these ingredients is even cheaper.
Doesn't the positive side of batteries actually deform? I heard that two used batteries will give you two almost pristine negative sides to combine to make an almost new battery with.
With this is a temporary fix, because if you mix those two things within that battery, it’s gonna eventually corrode the lead in it common sense. If you wanna fix a real better either go buy a brand-new one or pay the money for actual battery acid be smart.
Well you know once you did the baking soda clean step step and then you Drain it You can go to most auto parts stores and buy battery acid I know at least Advanced auto parts has it But I would definitely check around
You need to rinse out batt after the initial 24 hours of the distilled water and epsome soak. Rince out batt several times with regular tap water. Then make some more epsome salt and distilled water mix and add to batt cells. Charge for 24 hours on slow charge. Now its a new battery.
I believe the salt water was supposed to be poured out and rinse the battery out once again with clean distilled water. Then refill the battery with sulfuric acid from one of your local parts store. Then it would have worked.
No, the Epsom salt works as the electrolytes instead of the sulfuric acid. Although he could have filtered the old acid and just topped off the fluid with salt mixture additive after cleaning
Quite an interesting video, but I would have used pure concentrated sulfuric acid instead of the hydrated magnesium sulfate solution with the distilled water. Handling this strong acid is risky if it splashes on you though. May be you are better off just buying another new battery. The consequences of a splash from sulfuric acid could be permanent. It is the strongest industrial acid out there. It could go through your cloths and into your skin in an accident. Always be careful if you mess with chemical agents, electricity or gasoline components. I usually stay away from them.
I once drained the 10% acid and replaced it with 20%. Fi ed the battery for three days. On the third day on the way home from work the battery exploded and blew the hood off of a 1982 ford Ltd. .
Better yet, do the recommended maintenance, such as topping off with distilled water; make sure the alternator is in working order; belts tightened, etc.
👏very well done, kinda, yes the plates will create a build up, and this build up flakes off over time and settle in between these plates creating a short circuit. Getting this gunk off and out between these plate is a must along with putting new acid in but if you first filtered the old acid and poured back in and connected a old none smart charger and forced charged that battery on high ,,not the start setting,, and let it set a few days. Battery would have become warm, bubbles would have appeared and alot more flakes would have come off. Then shake and pour out. Put in new acid and charge. !!BUT!! a smart charger, A charger with a chip, will not force charge any battery. A old transformer type charger can bring back a completely dead battery, a smart charger would see it as a short circuit a (bad battery)and kick off. They do this even on a week battery that won't take a certain amount of charge over a certain amount of time, they just kick off.. old chargers, they charge using a transformer, not through a programed chip that's also design to test the condition of a battery and that's what they all do, and if a battery isn't in near perfect condition these charger just keep kicking off. Look for at Flee markets. Garage sales, maybe ebay? . I just found another one for 10 bucks at a flee market in great condition and if you had it on that battery you would have seen over 14 volts on your volt meter forcing a charge on that battery. You read 12 volts with charger connected to it, your charger kicked off...a bad battery can show 12 volts, but it's about available current (amps) that does the work,, you can sometimes get a little more life out of a old worn battery, but not with a digital computer chip charger. These Chargers are much cheaper to make and sale. Get an old one to have around and you won't be replacing your riding mowers, ect, batteries as often either.
i can vouch for this. i used an old laptop power supply and soldered in some battery clamps on the output and it'll easily charge to as high as 15 to 16 volts if u let it sit. im not sure how good that would be for a battery under normal circumstances to be charged that much more than its intended output, but for this use, i think it will be ideal. i guess i'm gonna find out as im about to attempt to refurbish my battery in the next day or so.
I have an old transformer type charger but it doesn't work anymore. Do you know anyone that fixes them . I'm not sure what the problem is or if it's worth fixing
Dunno if u have a tractor supply where u live but they still sell the old type chargers for like 60 bucks I have 1 of them and also an old charger that's about 30 yrs old just because I hate the smart chargers for the facts u stated we had a battery totally dead and all we had was a smart charger kept kicking off so we didn't have jumper cables at the moment do now anyway we took 2 pieces of coated wire and hooked the dead battery to a fully charged battery for about 30 minutes enough that it would spark and the smart charger finally recognized it didn't have a short in it and finally charged it
You removed sulfuric acid from the battery but did not show the proper (safe) disposal of it. You "cleaned" the lead and lead oxide plates with baking soda (sodium bicarbonate), which would just neutralize any remaining acid and form the participating sodium sulfate. Then you supplied a rich solution of magnesium sulfate and charged the battery. The charging current would cause the magnesium to plate out on the negative battery plates. The chemistry of your "experiment" just doesn't work. Although you may have what appears to be a good voltage reading, that battery will have virtually no cranking power.
I like your chemical analysis of this. I have seen inside and seen what happens to the lead , Just buy a new battery. People trying to restore old batteries is a waste of time.
after Getting the battery to take a charge but what is the cold cranking amps. I didn't see a load test. it can show volts but can it hold up while in use.
i was in the battery reconditioning bizz for 30 years. i'll give you a 2 out of 10. One free tip , dump the old acid in 5 gallon buckets , lock them up in an out building for a week, all the crap settles to the bottom. I never bought new battery acid. The next 1000 tips are not free. Think i'll write a book.
Led acid batteries consist of 2 different kind of lead plates sitting in acid. This makes electric current. The plates wear out and become the same kind but a different lead together. So no current flow. Cleaning the sulfate off will help, but charging turn the places back to their original lead type. With sulfate removed there won't be as much lead, but there will be current flow, just not as much.
Hey everybody. A word of warning: If you have a broken terminal it's a very dangerous condition. Don't use the battery at least if it still has sulfuric acid in it. If it causes a spark inside, it will blow up with enough force to tear off the top of the battery. I'm thinking that it wouldn't happen with salt and water. Does anyone know? Thanks for the video. It gives me food for thought.
at my auto apprenticeship, i was told The Story of -- `rapid-expansion-of gas` of a L/A-Accu. , due; Hydrogen buildup & consecutive H-Ignition. The Batt. Shell had shattered, launching Acid about a great space. .......pardon - just noticed, i posted erroneously. 🙃.
So you're just saying after 2 days of charging it did not work. Now you want to charge it for another day. What about doing the load test on it after you get a voltage reading. Need to see that. Jim
You can start the car , remove the battery , and drive a loooooong way on the alternator . I personally wouldn't do it at night if could possibly avoid it , but , if its a good alternator , I'd head for home ! ! !
@@sandybarbee8401 maybe on an older car, not with cars that have a ECM. You can shock the ECM and that could cost over 2000.00 to fix. Any car that has a ECM running ( anything above normally 1981 ) the car can be damaged
Just solved the problem in my Chrysler 300.Went to mr tire and got a new battery.They are hard to install cause they are in the trunk under a mat.Several wires on the terminals and i broke one the last time so i let them install it.best 200 dollars I've ever spent.stay safe people cause another virus is coming.
You can bring back batteries like that by using a long low charge. I have a 45 year old Schumacher 10/30/50 amp charger and use the 10 amp charge for 12 hour periods to bring up the voltage and CCAs. Recently brought back a 4 year old Walmart battery that had dropped down to 11.5 volts and under 300 CCA. I let Walmart recharge it first for 2 hours which brought it up to 12.4 volts and 350 CCA. Then I used it to charge my cell phone and a battery pack for it until it was back down to 11.5 volts and 300 CCA. Put it on a 10 amp charge for 12 hours which raised the voltage to 12.2 volts and CCSs to 400. Drained it down a second time the same way but now it was showing 11.8 volts and 300 CCA. Recharged the battery again for 12 hours. I let it rest for two hours before checking with my load tester. It now showed 13 volts and 500 CCA. Recharged my phone and battery pack then rechecked both to see the voltage was 12.8 and just below 500 CCA. Have the battery pack being recharged right now to drain it further before recharging tomorrow at 10 amps for 6 hours. I expect it will return to 13 volts with the CCAs increasing to 550. Then it will be back to normal. Had it in my '88 Chevy van since October of 2020. The van stayed parked from March 2023 to August 2024. I idled the engine every 4 months to recharge the battery @ 14 volts which kept it around 12.8 volts with 550 CCA (is rated for 690 CCA). I probably could raise the CCAs back up to 600 or more if left on my 2 amp trickle charger.
At 11.5 volts there is nothing wrong with the battery. It only needed charging and maybe a little water. A bad battery will check below 10 volts. It is 2 volt per cell and 6 cell battery is 12 volts so all cell are good. 10 or less volts means one cell or more cells are dead.
I believe a battery cell is 2.2 volts, so it should be 13.2 volts. The problem arises when the battery won't hold a charge adequate to engage the starter. No amount of recharging will get you going. You'll need a jump every time you try to start the car
@@jamestragle9504 battery that are 12 volts, each cell is 2.1 volts per cell. that makes it a 12.6 battery. When a battery reaches 11.7 it needs to be recharged, if it doe not recharge then each cell must be checked to see if that are at 2.1 volts. a battery with a 1.5 volts is most likely a bad cell and is not able to be repaired. to recondition a battery you must check each cell and a gravity test should be done
@@edwardmoyer3189 well now, you've opened an interesting can of worms and quite possibly answered a question I've been mulling over. First, the can of worms. I based my 2.2v per cell on what I learned ages ago. I stepped out to test the batteries in the 2017 Tacoma and 2005 Solara we own. Yup, 12.6ish on both. Then I stepped into my garage and tested an older battery in a 1978 CB750K I own. It's on a trickle charger and sitting at 13.5v (charger disconnected). I checked the Clymer manual on a 1998 bike I've got and the fully charged battery should be 13.6v. The Google machine gives results for 2.2 and 2.1v per cell automotive batteries. The question I have centers around a conversation I had when I got a new battery for the Tacoma about a week ago. The original battery in the Solara lasted more than 8 years. I've got a 2013 F250 with the original battery - 9 years and oh crap I just guaranteed it'll fail soon... Anyway the guy at the auto parts store informed me that they don't make em like they used to. Big surprise, eh? When did they go from 2.2 to 2.1? Perhaps the answer in the form of a question is: Is that 0.1v difference influential on life span?
My car battery died one time while fixing a computer at a client’s house. My inner voice of intuition told me to add Calcium Bicarbonate (Baking soda) and lemon juice. I added the mix to the battery terminals and after keeping the jumper cables attached to the other vehicle for 10 minutes. The vehicle starter started the engine. Somehow the chemical reaction did the job.
You really did a good presentation and it's commendable. Thanks for your honesty there. But did the end product work? Next time, while your process was convincing and tempting to attempt, we are interested in the full result, otherwise you wasted a nice presentation which resulted only in wasted viewing time. But you presented your process very well. Result, that's what we want, don't you think?
Howdy Henry, sorry I didn't show putting it back in the car. It did work and lasted for about 3 months or so. In the end I did just replace the battery with a new unit. Thanks for reaching out.
Except for the final proof we needed and anticipated, you did really well in the " how". You should further your presentation by reverse engineering the battery, showing us the actual inside, it's parts, how they are put together, how they interact. It's a valuable lesson to really have, needed where the acquisition of a new battery is next to impossible. Your teaching is one that makes a man to survive from next to nothing. Buying is not teaching. I go with your style. Teach a man to fish and he'll live a lifetime. Let him buy and he'll expire with the battery. Your presentation is a great intro, but walk us to the end where we see our efforts rewarded. Thanks. By the way, it's the American spirit in you " never give up ". I'm proud of you! We, veterans, fought to keep our nation alive so you with that American spirit can continue to encourage the world to " never give up if there's even a sliver of possibility ".
Don't wast your time. Clean the terminals on the battery and the car. charge the disconnected battery then load test. replace if it fails. it is what it is.
So if you were working on this for days and you ended the video basically not working at all then this should be a video on what not to do! Listen if you're going to make dui videos anyone please make sure you're information is correct and you actually know what you are doing! No disrespect to the guy made this video I actually think he was entertaining and I also saw videos restoring batteries this way
I've done to my weak car battery and it's successful. But there's a bit different from yours. The acid/water on the first rinse, I keep it aside and refill it back by using strainer just to get rid of those corroded remnants that came out of the battery. The rest of the process (rinsing with baking soda/distilled water) pretty much the same.
Testing voltage means nothing.. Its the cranking amps that matter.. its true low voltage will have low amps but good voltage does not always mean good amps.. volts dont start cars, amps do..
If there is no damage something you just need to charge it for 3 straight weeks to get it like new condition. In rare cases yes you have to buy parts for them
It seems like a lot of work to achieve a less than desirable solution. Buying a new battery with all the warranty it comes with seems like a better idea.
What happened to the other half of the epsom salt solution after you mixed it? When you poured the finished solution from the pot and into the gallon jug, the jug was only filled half-way.
This technology is a LEAD/ACID BATTERY. It has to have Sulfuric Acid to interact with the lead plates in order to work. The BAKING soda neutralizes Acid. So, by pouring Baking Soda water into the battery, you have removed ALL acid from the cells. Salty water and lead will just sit there. There is no reaction there. Will someone, smarter than me, explain the chemical reaction that takes place that causes a Lead/Acid battery to hold a charge. I just know what I have been taught, and after having a job of helper to a battery builder for about 6 months, we built the batteries and melted lead and made all our own connector posts and busses and built 8 volt batteries, 450 pounds apiece, and poured Sulfuric Acid and special water into them. 8 of the batteries in series was 64 volts. That would raw crank a 20 cylinder diesel engine. Someone explain how Epsome salt water can replace Sulphuric Acid in a battery and it work!
Thanks for going through that. I've seen this in a few other videos which attempt to rejuvenate an old battery My experience is that my time is better spent driving to Costco to buy an Interstate battery for about $100. Here is what I have found. Often my batteries do sit awhile and don't get the proper charging that they should. On the last two Costco batteries which this occurred for me, I took them back to Costco. I was pleasantly surprised to find that they only charged me $5 to replace a three-year-old battery with a new A buddy of mine, who also took back a three-year-old Costco battery actually got paid $5 and a new battery from Costco. Not saying this will happen for you, but why not get a little peace of mind with a new battery. Who knows +/- $5, plus a new battery could also be in your future,. LOL. But seriously, we all have to gauge what our time is worth versus the effort we're going to put into Old parts.
He said he got a new battery within 90 days of doing this. Meaning it did not work. Adding magnesium sulfate (epsom salt) with a neutral PH of 7 is not the appropriate electrolyte conductor. Sulfuric acid that the battery comes with has a PH of 1
TESTING THE BATTERY UNDER LOAD IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PART! (AS YOUR CAR STARTER DOES WHEN STARTING VEHICLE) RECONDITIONING THE BATTERY THIS WAY TO HOLD 12VOLTS IS GREAT BUT BATTERY WILL DRAIN UNDER THE FIRST LOAD ATTEMPT WHEN INSTALLED BACK IN THE VEHICLE. Volts and amps are not the same exactly
The battery voltage without a load really tells you nothing. You need to measure the battery voltage under load. I highly recommend that people do not try to refurbish a car battery as there are so many ways to hurt yourself. I get it - they're expensive to replace - But so are your eyes! When plates in batteries wear out they're toast. Simple as that.
Without replacing the lead plates its not gonna hold a charge. Thats why batteries die the lead gets eaten up by the acid which creates voltage . when lead is gone its gone . replace it and its new. Just replacing the acid is just half of it Might help but it won't last
Batteries die because the lead plates create a sulfate on the plates. Eventually the sulfates build up to the point that they no longer flow electrons . Cleaning may expose more of the lead and get the flow going again, but usually by this time the lead plates are pretty much used up, so even cleaning the sulfates and putting in new acid will not save it, it may have voltage but very low cranking amps. Another old trick was to overcharge the battery with a high amp charger which would cause the sulfates to flake off the plates, but this was only a temporary solution as well. When you've got no lead, your battery is dead.
OLD SCHOOL You are correct , sir.
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ruclips.net/video/VYtkn-N_p4s/видео.html
Batteries are made with two types of oxides. This ia paiste made of sulfuric acud and lead. This paiste is called posive msterial which is then applied to the positive grid after drying to cure it then becomes a positive plate. This is where the battery gets its voktage .the negative plates are formed in much the same way .but chemicaly work differently.the positvive provide the voltage and the negative plates are there to carry the amperage from one plate to the next..
everything has a life and nothing beats new,esp batteries,i dont' know about most people but to me a car truck that won't go state to state, its not worth much,new batteries,new belts,new hoses,every 4 years,no matter what,oil changes every 3500x3 then go to 5000 x3 then back to 3500,keeping the pan clean is all of it,OLD SCHOOL you know nothing beats new or first design,the first anything was designed because the guy needed it,hang in there
Don't drop or rattle your battery too hard or the lead plates will dislodge and your fucked. You do want to slosh the baking soda/distilled water solution in the battery though, just not crazy hard. You know what I mean? Anyway this method worked fantastic with my battery. It's only 2 years old, but I don't use the vehicle very much. I did go to Harbor freight and buy a cheapo $10 trickle charger with the solar panel. I've heard good reviews on it, so I'll have to see. I payed $150+ for the stupid battery a couple years ago and it's already gone up to almost $200. This is January of 2024.
I did this some time ago to 3 batteries and only one came back but the one battery has worked for years and saved me about 130.00 to replace it.🙂
So many times over the past half century I've sniveled about the desert heat in Tucson, especially the humid monsoon heat but then I remind myself - Hey, at least it isn't Phoenix!
Thanks for this video!
You understand my pain lol thanks for watching!
For some of the comments who are quick to go to the shop and replace or repair , Please such DIY are for people who find themselves off grid , imagine you are in Alaska or some very rural African place , this can really help. And again some people even if they may be located in big cities they still don’t have money to replace a battery .
Well said.
Save some money and travel to Africa, not as bad as you may think
Was africa necessary to drive your point home..DAAA..
I've got 50 12 volt battery's that I'm now rebuilding thank, you
Use sodium sulfate instead of epsom salt (Much gentler on the electrodes and does not heavily oxidize the positive plates when charging And it's even more conductive too)
And it also has much higher output current than magnesium sulfate.
Alum sulfate will also work as well. but its not the best choice.
Just add about a tablespoon worth into each cell (Not too much!)
This will raise the conductivity of the electrolyte if its weak. and also aid in forming the electrodes gently. re-forming the lead sulfates into lead and lead oxides. without over-oxidizing the positive plate like the magnesium sulfate/espom salt would
I have had nothing but bad experience with magnesium sulfate and several tests ive done. it is simply too aggressive and attacks the positive electrode quite strongly. (it is fast at forming the lead oxides. but it will increase corrosion)
No need to use any baking soda either or removing or replacing the electrolyte..
Just charge the battery with the sodium sulfate added to it for a long time at a low current and allow the voltage to rise to whatever it takes to accept that low current (Charge at about C1/100)
Until the voltage is about 14-16v. Then the battery can be put on a normal charger and held in absorption (14.4-14.8v) for several additional hours. until the current has stabilized at a low value.
Watch for heating of the battery. Take a measurement regularly if it starts warming up at any point. let it sit for several hours to cool completely.
Regularly check the voltage and current as well. just to be sure theres no shorted cells or anything unusual happening
You can also add about 1/8 teaspoon of boric acid or borax to each cell. as an additional additive. it creates a protective boron layer on the electrodes. specifically the negative. resistant to sulfation.
if all else fails and you cannot revive the original sulfuric acid out of the lead sulfate stored in the plates. (Cannot raise the specific gravity)
Only then may it be time to try replacing the electrolyte with an alternative such as alum. sodium sulfate. mixture. or baking soda
(Possible electrolyte alternative could be washing soda or sodium carbonate. as it is the strongest alkaline electrolyte ive found that can still form the lead oxide in the plates. creating an almost super-capacitor like battery performance. Very tough and hard to kill. can be charged and discharged thousands of times with no damage. Deep discharge is completely harmless)
You will get a significantly lower voltage though. between 8-11v so there is a drawback for going completely alkaline-for the electrolyte. PH will be roughly 10-11 if fully converted to alkaline.
What type of sodium sulfate and where to get it.
@dallaslouie Thats my question. Where you buy the stuff?
😅
After dumping out the baking soda water you should have rinsed the battery a couple times with water to get all that out of battery, then before adding any of your Epson salt concoction used a specific gravity tester to test the strength of your concoction to ensure proper strength 1st before adding any of it to your battery. Filter your used electrolyte and pour equal amounts into each cell and top up with your concoction. After adding the proper strength solution to battery, then put charger on deep cycle battery setting if you have that setting. A smart charger may do the same thing by charging at different rates until fully charged over a 24 hour period or longer. I have seen batteries after trying to fix them that showed 12.8 volts but as soon as I went to turn the engine over the battery went to 7 volts and would not turn the engine over. This indicates that simply charging to 12.3 or above doesn't always translate to the battery being fixed, especially if the battery originally went dead while below freezing and as such froze up and broke some plates inside the battery. I usually use the specific gravity tester in each cell to see which cell is showing weak solution and which are showing normal, I will remove with a suction device like a fluid transfer pump or just the bubble device I am using which is the specific gravity tester, until the fluid is below the plates in that cell. At this point the strong concoction of Epson salts and water can be added just to the specific cells that are showing they are below normal on the tester. This saves a lot of time and most of the original electrolyte gets to stay in the battery. After this I put the covers on the cells and charge for minimum of 24 hours and with all of this there is no guarantees the battery will ever function like a new battery. Prevention is still the best way to look after a battery, remove either it or 1 terminal when not in use for extended periods of time, recharge every 3 months, do not store on a concrete floor but rather on a bench or wood of some kind.
I have to agree with everything you said here with the exception of the concrete floor. This is a myth and a hold over fallacy from the days when car batteries had metal in their cases. New batteries up today have cases made entirely of plastic.
You can put a brand new battery on the concrete floor in your shop and put another one on the wood counter and check them a month later there should be no difference whatsoever.
all your blabbing but its redundant. the PH of the acid will literally self balance with a charge. He could do all that but it bbn isnt neccessary on an old junky battery.
@@SEPHICHI420p
This works, I had a car quest gold last 12 years doing this. In brutal cold to insane hot.
Good to hear! Thanks for watching
Yes baking soda works. Just did it. My battery died but brought back to life.
@@stefandieter7136
Go with spending the money on an Optima battery. I had one in my 2000 Montero for 11 years plus. When I had to scrap the car after my daughter let the coolant go way low and blew out one head gasket. I took the battery out and it is still working perfectly 5 years later! $325.00 Well spent as I probably would have had to change batteries 4 or 5 times during that 16 year period.
ONE MAJOR BENEFIT ...gell pack batteries will not outgas or leak and cause rust in your classic Porsche 👌👍
I’ve got a yellow top optima gel battery and it’s still good and strong after 6-7 years now of being used and ran dead on several occasions as well as drained on several Saturday nights over them years in my dirt track car.
Don't forget to turn then upside down for two weeks a year.
There are way better batteries than optima
I retired from my last job manufacturing car batteries. The plates inside the battery look like fly swatters and then they are covered with a lead oxide paste. When this paste falls off the plates after so many years, there is no way to make your battery better. This guy is wasting his time.
I have just gotten one step closer to being the smartest man on Earth,Thanks for the video
I keep a battery tender on my old truck battery and lawn tractor when sitting for extended periods of time. Works great.
That's a good idea!
Battery tender will constantly charge it, which means that the internals of the battery get warm, distilled water will evaporate, overall liquid levels will drop, acid concentration will be too high and cause corrosion on lead plates inside the battery - this results in a residue that will short circuit one or several of the canisters. Battery tender wont know that there is one faulty canister and will overcharge the other ones to reach the 12 volts. While doing that, it will further overheat the other canisters. The battery will start a car for one time or two and then it has lost its charge to 9v or lower. Also when one of the canister is shorted out or low on liquid, the battery will start boiling when alternator charges it.
What the process in this video does is remove mentioned corrosion residue and clean the plates. Then refill with clean acid or salt water. It helps but some of the plate material is still gone and its not comparable to a new battery. Its OK for warm climate areas and petrol cars but not high cranking current demanding diesel cars.
Battery tender will work too without any issues but only if you check the liquid levels and top up with distilled water - of course if the caps on the canisters can be removed - on most newer batteries they cant because battery manufacturers use ultrasonic welding to make the covers not removable so that you would have to buy a new battery instead 🤓
without load testing, the battery after doing the recondition 12 v means nothing.
That’s what i was thinking, where was the load test, you can surface charge just about any lead acid battery.. load test the fooker to it full CCAs and then show us..
You are correct
@@formosabrowning3539 at my workshop, we managed to charge a four lemons to show 12volts, We were Successful in lighting a tiny LED bulb on a test light for about 40 seconds.. (did I technically recondition the lemon). 😂
You are so correct A+for you !!
Yep. Volts ain't amps. 😂
rubber gloves, safety glasses and a good mask thank, you.
You got bigger problems than a battery, someone took your engine and replaced it with a spare tire.
Finally someone noticed lol for watching Tom
@@ArrowheadGarage I have heard of white vinegar on top of 1/4th.cup of baking soda per cell . Then add your mix of epsom salt, wash it out extensively with several fillings with water, drain completely, then add back the settled acid,
Why did you not add back the acid, only a charged battery holds the electrolytes in the plates, a discharged one has 80% of the acid in the liquid.
Can you say why u did not add acid
Don't make me laugh! 😂🤣
He tried, but is healing up from that .45 cal. Slug through his leg!
@tom mak, good joke, made me laugh but i'm sure you know porsche engines are in the back
putting a load tester on it will show its performance, just because it reads over 13 volts doesn't mean it will hold current, and be a daily user
Drain battery and flush it with a garden hose, then one rinse with distilled water. That dislodges any particles of plate material that build up on the bottom of the n battery and might be causing slight internal short circuits between the plates
Most important... Pour distilled water back in the battery for the final process..!
Yes a load test will check to see if you can pull a load. Easier yet. Let battery sit overnight and recheck voltage. If voltage drops it’s not going to work. But a load test is better. But if you don’t have a tester check voltage and recheck 24-30 hrs later. If it drops from 12.6- 12.0 it’s not going to work . Nice video . But remember to load test it as well or sit and watch for voltage drop.
hello ......how are you doing??
Thanks for trying this out .Other attempts suggest that Epsom salts will result in a battery that will only give 9 volt but last for over five teen years .That is interesting for making large static battery banks for off grid use where 48 volts is wanted do 5 of these 9 volt batteries will give the 45 volts which works for them .The upside with salt battery it seems they don't get damaged from total discharge but they don't preform well under large loads . Many You tubes on Epsom salt replacements .Also in third world many RUclips's on how to melt the lead plates and remake new battery using acid systems . LSO many you tubes an using welder equipment with 200 amps to boil battery in five minute bursts until battery works again . I have yet to see a 12 volt Epsom salt battery return 12 volt solutions for any interesting time periods so very interested for your results now 11 months on .Can it supply cranking power to start gasoline engine .I don't mind to gang together several to get cranking power for my 13 HP marine engine on my boat and for domestic us . Li thuim ion ferros oxide phosporn type Li Fe PO4 has problems with cost and expensive chargers and cold temperature charging and high temperature s and Alternator charging in marine use . Lead crystal battery costs per cycle is also a problem . We need more people to do these experiments to see if we can rescue lead acid batteries to keep from forkingbout big bucks every few years especially in warm countries where lead acid batteries have much shorter lives than temoerate regions
It's a 12 volt battery not 48 volts
You wire the batteries in series to make 48 volts. That is exactly what the OP is writing about. Please read his post.
255 Hyatt we're3 no
=4
motor in rear!!!
you need to remove your Epsom Salt water rinse it good, and filter your aced you drained out put it back with a little Epsom Salt in each cell then charge it heavy then see what you get, works better that way.
It's NOT EPSOM salt It's Baking soda!
Volts is not what you need it is also amps that the battery holds that is important.
Before you start your procedure hold the battery upside down about 6-8" inches above the pavement and drop it a time or two...If the posts aren't recessed zip tie a piece of wood to it first... sounds crazy but trust me.
It sounds like youve been smokin some of the new stuff.or ya need to .
sounds good to me! Ha. You need to physically break the seals between the pieces of lead, so the liquid can reach all the lead. Am I right?
The plates in a battery have seperaters between each plate..without them the plates would simply short out .
@@ethelb6023 it's like a head start to loosen the calcium.
@@michaelwarren3853 it's like a head start to loosen the calcium.
I'm aircraft avionics tech. You makes me smile.
Put a load tester on it to check Cold Cranking Amps. Residual voltage isn’t telling you anything.
thank, you. it works now I've got 50 new rebuilt 12 volt battery's
I just saw a clip with a doctor recommending drinking the same to purify your stomach....
1 Litre distilled water, 1 tsp baking soda, 1 tsp sea salt. Divide in 4 and drink every 2'nd hour...
Makes sense 😂
Tip: The distilled water is polluted when poring it in a "bucket" like that...
I like to tinker so I'm gonna try this but how much is your time worth?
Thanks for the video.
The battery lasted about 2 months, before I replaced it.
Back in the early 80's I worked for a used battery service' the owner had a contract with JCPenney's/Sears
Kmart to buy all their old batteries' we'd pour all the old acid water out and use a 50/50 mixture of white distilled cleaning vinegar to wash them out then rinse out and repeat' fill with new acid' place them on the charging tables' up to 200/250 batteries at a time' hook them up all together in parallel and charge them on 2 amps for 3 days' then let them sit for a week off charge' about 25% of them would not hold charge' the ones that did' we were selling them for $15.00/$20.00/$25.00
depending on appearance' some would last a couple of months some would last for years.
Slow charge is the key after cleaning and new acid.
What do you do if you don't have the caps on the battery
@@pawtaylor
Back then the majority had caps' there were a few that were sealed' on those we had to peel the manufacturer label off the top of the battery and under the label there were caps'
they were recessed and sat flush with the top of the battery' on some you could see a small hairline crack between the cap and top of the battery' a small flathead screwdriver or pocket knife and pry them out. On others you could see the outline of the seal' on those we had to take a utility knife and cut into the outline of the seal to separate the cap from the battery and then pry it out.
I remember being in the lower shop and all the sudden BAMM!!!
Sound like a cannon had went off from the charging process' I could feel the battery acid on my face and arms from being in the air' there was a couple of times they blew a hole clean through the tin roof of the charging area.
I buy those jogs of sulfuric acid from any auto parts store, and then drain and refill. Now this has worked for say, 6 out of 10 batteries I've tried, and my best guess for the bad ones, is damage to cells, or extreme contamination since I've never 'rinsed' or cleaned any of them.
Using these ingredients is even cheaper.
How much does the sulfuric acid replacement at the auto parts store cost?
Doesn't the positive side of batteries actually deform? I heard that two used batteries will give you two almost pristine negative sides to combine to make an almost new battery with.
With this is a temporary fix, because if you mix those two things within that battery, it’s gonna eventually corrode the lead in it common sense. If you wanna fix a real better either go buy a brand-new one or pay the money for actual battery acid be smart.
Well you know once you did the baking soda clean step step and then you Drain it You can go to most auto parts stores and buy battery acid I know at least Advanced auto parts has it But I would definitely check around
You need to rinse out batt after the initial 24 hours of the distilled water and epsome soak. Rince out batt several times with regular tap water. Then make some more epsome salt and distilled water mix and add to batt cells. Charge for 24 hours on slow charge. Now its a new battery.
You're pretty smart on this one lot of people don't know that
Wrong you need new electrolyte which is sulfuric acid after initial cleaning. You can buy it at some auto parts stores.
@@rickpaz9562 you do it your way
I do it my way
I believe the salt water was supposed to be poured out and rinse the battery out once again with clean distilled water. Then refill the battery with sulfuric acid from one of your local parts store. Then it would have worked.
No, the Epsom salt works as the electrolytes instead of the sulfuric acid. Although he could have filtered the old acid and just topped off the fluid with salt mixture additive after cleaning
@@vexxcloud5543 It seems like a lot of salt.
Too much Salt is bad for you.
@@dalehood1846 lol. Too much battery acid is bad for you too. To much anything is bad.
@@dalehood1846 who eats epsom salts?
Quite an interesting video, but I would have used pure concentrated sulfuric acid instead of the hydrated magnesium sulfate solution with the distilled water. Handling this strong acid is risky if it splashes on you though. May be you are better off just buying another new battery. The consequences of a splash from sulfuric acid could be permanent. It is the strongest industrial acid out there. It could go through your cloths and into your skin in an accident. Always be careful if you mess with chemical agents, electricity or gasoline components. I usually stay away from them.
I once drained the 10% acid and replaced it with 20%. Fi ed the battery for three days. On the third day on the way home from work the battery exploded and blew the hood off of a 1982 ford Ltd. .
@@richardtackett7597 Wow, that is bad. It is best not to mess with such things. Just invest in a new battery. Thank God you were not injured.
You're supposed to dilute it
Using the Hammett acidity function:
Helonium: −63
Fluoroantimonic acid : −23 < H0 < −28
Magic acid: −23
Carborane superacids: H0 < −18.0
Fluorosulfuric acid : −15.1
Hydrogen fluoride: −15.1
Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid: −15.1
Perchloric acid: −13
Sulfurochloridic acid: -13.8; −12.78[11]
Sulfuric acid: −12.0
@@terrytorkildson2831"magic acid" Wait, what??
Why not take the old battery to a car shop to do the revival with fresh sulphuric acid? Epson salt is not the correct acid for battery.
The base of Arrowhead's instruction is good! This effort takes time and diligence. The cleaner it is, ...
now, I see what makes a battery cell goes dead is that the lead plates inside the battery gets dirty. Again, thank you for you're video
From my experience it will worke for 2 days just enough to crank the car twice... But thank you for your efforts
What did you do with the original sulphuric acid you took out of the battery? Will you be reusing it again , if not how do we didpose of it?
You can neutralize sulfuric acid with baking soda and water then if ok to dispose anyhow you want
Makes good toilet cleaner
Pour it on a fire ant mound 😋
Get an alkaline substance to neutralize spilled acid. Ash from a wood stove may be used if nothing better is available.
That's what I want to know!!!!! also ...
Awsome dude, thanks it really works. Try the ark weld method first. Then the cleaning process. Add new Epsom solution afterwards.
Ive seen 100% better batter rebuilds by guys sitting on dirt floors in India and 100% theirs actually worked.
Send us some links.
Better yet, do the recommended maintenance, such as topping off with distilled water; make sure the alternator is in working order; belts tightened, etc.
👏very well done, kinda, yes the plates will create a build up, and this build up flakes off over time and settle in between these plates creating a short circuit. Getting this gunk off and out between these plate is a must along with putting new acid in but if you first filtered the old acid and poured back in and connected a old none smart charger and forced charged that battery on high ,,not the start setting,, and let it set a few days. Battery would have become warm, bubbles would have appeared and alot more flakes would have come off. Then shake and pour out. Put in new acid and charge. !!BUT!! a smart charger, A charger with a chip, will not force charge any battery. A old transformer type charger can bring back a completely dead battery, a smart charger would see it as a short circuit a (bad battery)and kick off. They do this even on a week battery that won't take a certain amount of charge over a certain amount of time, they just kick off.. old chargers, they charge using a transformer, not through a programed chip that's also design to test the condition of a battery and that's what they all do, and if a battery isn't in near perfect condition these charger just keep kicking off. Look for at Flee markets. Garage sales, maybe ebay? . I just found another one for 10 bucks at a flee market in great condition and if you had it on that battery you would have seen over 14 volts on your volt meter forcing a charge on that battery. You read 12 volts with charger connected to it, your charger kicked off...a bad battery can show 12 volts, but it's about available current (amps) that does the work,, you can sometimes get a little more life out of a old worn battery, but not with a digital computer chip charger. These Chargers are much cheaper to make and sale. Get an old one to have around and you won't be replacing your riding mowers, ect, batteries as often either.
i can vouch for this. i used an old laptop power supply and soldered in some battery clamps on the output and it'll easily charge to as high as 15 to 16 volts if u let it sit. im not sure how good that would be for a battery under normal circumstances to be charged that much more than its intended output, but for this use, i think it will be ideal. i guess i'm gonna find out as im about to attempt to refurbish my battery in the next day or so.
I have an old transformer type charger but it doesn't work anymore. Do you know anyone that fixes them . I'm not sure what the problem is or if it's worth fixing
Dunno if u have a tractor supply where u live but they still sell the old type chargers for like 60 bucks I have 1 of them and also an old charger that's about 30 yrs old just because I hate the smart chargers for the facts u stated we had a battery totally dead and all we had was a smart charger kept kicking off so we didn't have jumper cables at the moment do now anyway we took 2 pieces of coated wire and hooked the dead battery to a fully charged battery for about 30 minutes enough that it would spark and the smart charger finally recognized it didn't have a short in it and finally charged it
You removed sulfuric acid from the battery but did not show the proper (safe) disposal of it. You "cleaned" the lead and lead oxide plates with baking soda (sodium bicarbonate), which would just neutralize any remaining acid and form the participating sodium sulfate. Then you supplied a rich solution of magnesium sulfate and charged the battery. The charging current would cause the magnesium to plate out on the negative battery plates. The chemistry of your "experiment" just doesn't work. Although you may have what appears to be a good voltage reading, that battery will have virtually no cranking power.
Please explain to all of us more, that problem with new liquid, how can man make acid that was first in battery, let's assume, there is no acid to buy
Epsom salt solution replaces the sulphuric acid??
Totally agree with you on that. Ph of magnesium sulphate is about 6, almost neutral.
I like your chemical analysis of this.
I have seen inside and seen what happens to the lead ,
Just buy a new battery.
People trying to restore old batteries is a waste of time.
I had the same thought on all the points you mentioned. As for the safe disposal part.....well that was simply tossing it on the ground outside.
i just add table spoon epsom saltzto each cell let set over night it desolves crud on plates
Need to put a load tester on and see if it really holds the load
Yes, this is "half baked" thing. The result is not convincing as later he admitted it that he have to buy new battery. just waste of time.
@@junkvista61 the battery had over 12V to start with.
Why not just removing the sulfuric acid and doing the clean out with the baking soda why not just put sulfuric or new sulfuric acid back in
Terry where do u get sulfuric acid
@@saltwell80 in USA it is available guessing you are from UK?
Sulfuric acid at a pool store
@@saltwell80 you should be able to get it at any auto parts store
@@mikeodonnell6312 In my pool store here in NY they Hydrochloric acid, also known as Muriatic acid,
after Getting the battery to take a charge but what is the cold cranking amps. I didn't see a load test. it can show volts but can it hold up while in use.
about six months in and battery is still doing well
@@ArrowheadGarage ❤❤
is it ok to use sulfuric acid to recharge after washing battery with baking soda?
I have used distilled water and it worked.
Just watched from 2 years ago. Can't find the update you were mentioning. How did th we battery do over time?
i was in the battery reconditioning bizz for 30 years. i'll give you a 2 out of 10. One free tip , dump the old acid in 5 gallon buckets , lock them up in an out building for a week, all the crap settles to the bottom. I never bought new battery acid. The next 1000 tips are not free. Think i'll write a book.
Led acid batteries consist of 2 different kind of lead plates sitting in acid. This makes electric current. The plates wear out and become the same kind but a different lead together. So no current flow. Cleaning the sulfate off will help, but charging turn the places back to their original lead type. With sulfate removed there won't be as much lead, but there will be current flow, just not as much.
Hey everybody. A word of warning: If you have a broken terminal it's a very dangerous condition. Don't use the battery at least if it still has sulfuric acid in it. If it causes a spark inside, it will blow up with enough force to tear off the top of the battery. I'm thinking that it wouldn't happen with salt and water. Does anyone know? Thanks for the video. It gives me food for thought.
at my auto apprenticeship, i was told The Story of -- `rapid-expansion-of gas` of a L/A-Accu. , due;
Hydrogen buildup & consecutive H-Ignition.
The Batt. Shell had shattered, launching Acid about a great space.
.......pardon - just noticed, i posted erroneously. 🙃.
I watched it happen
So you're just saying after 2 days of charging it did not work. Now you want to charge it for another day. What about doing the load test on it after you get a voltage reading. Need to see that. Jim
Often better to replace a battery than burn out your alternator trying to charge a bad one. Much cheaper in the long run.
Thats very true.
You can start the car , remove the battery , and drive a loooooong way on the alternator . I personally wouldn't do it at night if could possibly avoid it , but , if its a good alternator , I'd head for home ! ! !
@@sandybarbee8401 maybe on an older car, not with cars that have a ECM. You can shock the ECM and that could cost over 2000.00 to fix. Any car that has a ECM running ( anything above normally 1981 ) the car can be damaged
@@edwardmoyer3189 . Thank You , Sir .
@@sandybarbee8401 that will burn an alternator out real fast. It full fields the alternator with nowhere for it to go. Try again
Just solved the problem in my Chrysler 300.Went to mr tire and got a new battery.They are hard to install cause they are in the trunk under a mat.Several wires on the terminals and i broke one the last time so i let them install it.best 200 dollars I've ever spent.stay safe people cause another virus is coming.
You can bring back batteries like that by using a long low charge. I have a 45 year old Schumacher 10/30/50 amp charger and use the 10 amp charge for 12 hour periods to bring up the voltage and CCAs. Recently brought back a 4 year old Walmart battery that had dropped down to 11.5 volts and under 300 CCA. I let Walmart recharge it first for 2 hours which brought it up to 12.4 volts and 350 CCA. Then I used it to charge my cell phone and a battery pack for it until it was back down to 11.5 volts and 300 CCA. Put it on a 10 amp charge for 12 hours which raised the voltage to 12.2 volts and CCSs to 400. Drained it down a second time the same way but now it was showing 11.8 volts and 300 CCA. Recharged the battery again for 12 hours. I let it rest for two hours before checking with my load tester. It now showed 13 volts and 500 CCA. Recharged my phone and battery pack then rechecked both to see the voltage was 12.8 and just below 500 CCA. Have the battery pack being recharged right now to drain it further before recharging tomorrow at 10 amps for 6 hours. I expect it will return to 13 volts with the CCAs increasing to 550. Then it will be back to normal. Had it in my '88 Chevy van since October of 2020. The van stayed parked from March 2023 to August 2024. I idled the engine every 4 months to recharge the battery @ 14 volts which kept it around 12.8 volts with 550 CCA (is rated for 690 CCA). I probably could raise the CCAs back up to 600 or more if left on my 2 amp trickle charger.
I'm all about saving money and fixing things but really just get a new battery or used. It is interesting though.
"The wife gets a little concerned" LOL
She have too " LOL😊
At 11.5 volts there is nothing wrong with the battery. It only needed charging and maybe a little water. A bad battery will check below 10 volts. It is 2 volt per cell and 6 cell battery is 12 volts so all cell are good. 10 or less volts means one cell or more cells are dead.
Not exactly true
But if you decide to add soda you will be going to the battery store
WRONG
I believe a battery cell is 2.2 volts, so it should be 13.2 volts. The problem arises when the battery won't hold a charge adequate to engage the starter. No amount of recharging will get you going. You'll need a jump every time you try to start the car
@@jamestragle9504 battery that are 12 volts, each cell is 2.1 volts per cell. that makes it a 12.6 battery. When a battery reaches 11.7 it needs to be recharged, if it doe not recharge then each cell must be checked to see if that are at 2.1 volts. a battery with a 1.5 volts is most likely a bad cell and is not able to be repaired. to recondition a battery you must check each cell and a gravity test should be done
@@edwardmoyer3189 well now, you've opened an interesting can of worms and quite possibly answered a question I've been mulling over.
First, the can of worms. I based my 2.2v per cell on what I learned ages ago. I stepped out to test the batteries in the 2017 Tacoma and 2005 Solara we own. Yup, 12.6ish on both. Then I stepped into my garage and tested an older battery in a 1978 CB750K I own. It's on a trickle charger and sitting at 13.5v (charger disconnected). I checked the Clymer manual on a 1998 bike I've got and the fully charged battery should be 13.6v. The Google machine gives results for 2.2 and 2.1v per cell automotive batteries.
The question I have centers around a conversation I had when I got a new battery for the Tacoma about a week ago. The original battery in the Solara lasted more than 8 years. I've got a 2013 F250 with the original battery - 9 years and oh crap I just guaranteed it'll fail soon...
Anyway the guy at the auto parts store informed me that they don't make em like they used to. Big surprise, eh? When did they go from 2.2 to 2.1?
Perhaps the answer in the form of a question is:
Is that 0.1v difference influential on life span?
I paid 497 dollars for mobility scooter batteries in 2021 in Australia.
My car battery died one time while fixing a computer at a client’s house. My inner voice of intuition told me to add Calcium Bicarbonate (Baking soda) and lemon juice. I added the mix to the battery terminals and after keeping the jumper cables attached to the other vehicle for 10 minutes. The vehicle starter started the engine. Somehow the chemical reaction did the job.
Right on Rigo, thanks for sharing that tip with us!
I’d rather buy a new battery. That process just doesn’t promise me that the battery will start always in any areas at any time.
THAT is a classic. I think that's the only 911 I'd want.
I just love the short wheel based long hoods!!! Thanks for watching and dropping a comment, I appreciate it!
Try and install new electrolight.And see what happens.Good post thanks
INTERSTATE BATTERIES NEVER DIE !! THE BEST OUT THERE HANDS DOWN
You really did a good presentation and it's commendable. Thanks for your honesty there. But did the end product work? Next time, while your process was convincing and tempting to attempt, we are interested in the full result, otherwise you wasted a nice presentation which resulted only in wasted viewing time. But you presented your process very well. Result, that's what we want, don't you think?
Howdy Henry, sorry I didn't show putting it back in the car. It did work and lasted for about 3 months or so. In the end I did just replace the battery with a new unit. Thanks for reaching out.
Except for the final proof we needed and anticipated, you did really well in the " how". You should further your presentation by reverse engineering the battery, showing us the actual inside, it's parts, how they are put together, how they interact. It's a valuable lesson to really have, needed where the acquisition of a new battery is next to impossible. Your teaching is one that makes a man to survive from next to nothing. Buying is not teaching. I go with your style. Teach a man to fish and he'll live a lifetime. Let him buy and he'll expire with the battery. Your presentation is a great intro, but walk us to the end where we see our efforts rewarded. Thanks. By the way, it's the American spirit in you " never give up ". I'm proud of you! We, veterans, fought to keep our nation alive so you with that American spirit can continue to encourage the world to " never give up if there's even a sliver of possibility ".
A friend of mine claims he has some ocean front property in Arizona for sale cheap.
Love that song!
Try reversing the polarity after flattening battery, & charging.
Don't wast your time. Clean the terminals on the battery and the car. charge the disconnected battery then load test. replace if it fails. it is what it is.
So if you were working on this for days and you ended the video basically not working at all then this should be a video on what not to do! Listen if you're going to make dui videos anyone please make sure you're information is correct and you actually know what you are doing! No disrespect to the guy made this video I actually think he was entertaining and I also saw videos restoring batteries this way
These people don't do an amp test on it and that is the important part to get your crank amps
Did it turn up well?
I've done to my weak car battery and it's successful. But there's a bit different from yours. The acid/water on the first rinse, I keep it aside and refill it back by using strainer just to get rid of those corroded remnants that came out of the battery. The rest of the process (rinsing with baking soda/distilled water) pretty much the same.
How much life do you get after that? He did an update that said battery was good for 2-3 months before repeating.
interesting item but how does it go under load of a starter ,may show volts but the amps ??
Never trust a guy with a "Hyper Tough" box in his trunk. 🤣
Lmoa😂😅😊
Testing voltage means nothing.. Its the cranking amps that matter.. its true low voltage will have low amps but good voltage does not always mean good amps.. volts dont start cars, amps do..
Can I use iodized cooking table salt instead of Epsom salt???
Jude no you gotta use the epsom salt on this hack!
How does the Epsom salts turn into acid like what was poured out
If there is no damage something you just need to charge it for 3 straight weeks to get it like new condition.
In rare cases yes you have to buy parts for them
The lead plates get thinner with time, so this may extend the battery life a bit, but that's all.
Something tells me he can do alot of non food related butter knife tricks 😂
It seems like a lot of work to achieve a less than desirable solution. Buying a new battery with all the warranty it comes with seems like a better idea.
What happened to the other half of the epsom salt solution after you mixed it? When you poured the finished solution from the pot and into the gallon jug, the jug was only filled half-way.
You can soak your tired feet in it!
This technology is a LEAD/ACID BATTERY. It has to have Sulfuric Acid to interact with the lead plates in order to work. The BAKING soda neutralizes Acid. So, by pouring Baking Soda water into the battery, you have removed ALL acid from the cells. Salty water and lead will just sit there. There is no reaction there. Will someone, smarter than me, explain the chemical reaction that takes place that causes a Lead/Acid battery to hold a charge. I just know what I have been taught, and after having a job of helper to a battery builder for about 6 months, we built the batteries and melted lead and made all our own connector posts and busses and built 8 volt batteries, 450 pounds apiece, and poured Sulfuric Acid and special water into them. 8 of the batteries in series was 64 volts. That would raw crank a 20 cylinder diesel engine. Someone explain how Epsome salt water can replace Sulphuric Acid in a battery and it work!
What is the follow up video? Was it good after a week?
It lasted about 2 months before it was dead again.
Thanks for going through that. I've seen this in a few other videos which attempt to rejuvenate an old battery
My experience is that my time is better spent driving to Costco to buy an Interstate battery for about $100.
Here is what I have found. Often my batteries do sit awhile and don't get the proper charging that they should.
On the last two Costco batteries which this occurred for me, I took them back to Costco. I was pleasantly surprised to find that they only charged me $5 to replace a three-year-old battery with a new
A buddy of mine, who also took back a three-year-old Costco battery actually got paid $5 and a new battery from Costco.
Not saying this will happen for you, but why not get a little peace of mind with a new battery. Who knows +/- $5, plus a new battery could also be in your future,. LOL.
But seriously, we all have to gauge what our time is worth versus the effort we're going to put into Old parts.
hello ......how are you doing??
I think I like this trick best of all. Too bad I don’t have a Costco membership.
can't find follow up on this video. so what happened? how long did the revived battery last? thanks.
Anything yet from this man?
He said he got a new battery within 90 days of doing this. Meaning it did not work. Adding magnesium sulfate (epsom salt) with a neutral PH of 7 is not the appropriate electrolyte conductor. Sulfuric acid that the battery comes with has a PH of 1
TESTING THE BATTERY UNDER LOAD IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PART! (AS YOUR CAR STARTER DOES WHEN STARTING VEHICLE) RECONDITIONING THE BATTERY THIS WAY TO HOLD 12VOLTS IS GREAT BUT BATTERY WILL DRAIN UNDER THE FIRST LOAD ATTEMPT WHEN INSTALLED BACK IN THE VEHICLE. Volts and amps are not the same exactly
So what did you do with the old battery acid?
My local county has a recycling location that takes just about anything you have to dispose of.
The battery voltage without a load really tells you nothing. You need to measure the battery voltage under load. I highly recommend that people do not try to refurbish a car battery as there are so many ways to hurt yourself. I get it - they're expensive to replace - But so are your eyes! When plates in batteries wear out they're toast. Simple as that.
hello ......how are you doing??
Wow. I clean my bong the same way
How many people can do all this? Have the equipment? I buy a new battery when due. Thanks
I didn't do all that I simply removed the old acid poured in distilled water, recharged. It worked like new.
JESUS WEPT
Without replacing the lead plates its not gonna hold a charge. Thats why batteries die the lead gets eaten up by the acid which creates voltage . when lead is gone its gone . replace it and its new. Just replacing the acid is just half of it
Might help but it won't last
You made my day , checking voltage with charger attached to it proving you have no clue about electricity 😂🤣😂....
He said he was showing what the voltage from the charger was. The second time he checked it the negative alligator clamp was disconnected.
When I'm thinking dead I'm thinking below 11 volts like 5 volts. I don't know if it works for batteries that are really really dead.