chl
Well-known member
- First Name
- CHRIS
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2022
- Threads
- 9
- Messages
- 3,167
- Reaction score
- 1,949
- Location
- alexandria virginia
- Vehicles
- 2023 F-150 LIGHTNING, 2012 Nissan Leaf, 2015 Toyota Prius, 2000 HD 883 Sportster
- Occupation
- Patent Atty / Electrical Engineer
Any an all 12v lead acid batteries will last longer if on a maintainer when not in use.
The reason is sulfate build up on the plates.
If the battery is not fully charged to 100% after use, the sulfates that form as a result of the chemical process of releasing stored energy will not be driven off of the plates in the battery back into the electrolyte, and they become a permanent coating reducing the ability of the battery to deliver energy.
Over time the sulfate build-up will 'kill" the battery's ability to deliver energy.
A battery maintainer will top off the battery to 100% and avoid this problem, using a low current to avoid another potential battery issue - overheating leading to swelling, loss of electrolyte and out-gassing of hydrogen gas. That has been seen in some Lightnings as well as the early death.
If you don't use a maintainer, you might get 2-5 years out of an AGM battery depending of driving habits, etc., before needing to replace it. Maybe that's enough for some, but there are many Lightning system components that are critically dependent on the 12v battery system.
From Lightning owner reports here and elsewhere, the lower end of the lifespan range seems to be a frequent occurrence.
When the 12v battery gets weak, the truck begins to shed loads, and then various error messages begin to show up indication problems with a variety of the truck's systems that can be disconcerting, even though they are due to the weak 12v battery.
OTAs may fail to install and you could even end up being stranded and needing a tow.
I have the original 12v battery (flooded not AGM) in my 2012 Nissan Leaf that has been on a maintainer since about March of 2012 and still does fine - that's over 14 years. I measured the SOH (state of health) recently and it was at 80%, about the threshold for replacement. So maintainers really work.
Maybe you've already seen these, but just in case:
About putting trickle charger/maintainers on the battery and how to make it easier by adding a trickle charger wire:
https://www.f150lightningforum.com/forum/threads/charging-12v-battery.16979/
The maintainer negative should be connected downstream of the BMS sensor as shown about, or to any chassis ground - just DO NOT connect it to the actual negative battery terminal which would by-pass the BMS sensor.
The reason is sulfate build up on the plates.
If the battery is not fully charged to 100% after use, the sulfates that form as a result of the chemical process of releasing stored energy will not be driven off of the plates in the battery back into the electrolyte, and they become a permanent coating reducing the ability of the battery to deliver energy.
Over time the sulfate build-up will 'kill" the battery's ability to deliver energy.
A battery maintainer will top off the battery to 100% and avoid this problem, using a low current to avoid another potential battery issue - overheating leading to swelling, loss of electrolyte and out-gassing of hydrogen gas. That has been seen in some Lightnings as well as the early death.
If you don't use a maintainer, you might get 2-5 years out of an AGM battery depending of driving habits, etc., before needing to replace it. Maybe that's enough for some, but there are many Lightning system components that are critically dependent on the 12v battery system.
From Lightning owner reports here and elsewhere, the lower end of the lifespan range seems to be a frequent occurrence.
When the 12v battery gets weak, the truck begins to shed loads, and then various error messages begin to show up indication problems with a variety of the truck's systems that can be disconcerting, even though they are due to the weak 12v battery.
OTAs may fail to install and you could even end up being stranded and needing a tow.
I have the original 12v battery (flooded not AGM) in my 2012 Nissan Leaf that has been on a maintainer since about March of 2012 and still does fine - that's over 14 years. I measured the SOH (state of health) recently and it was at 80%, about the threshold for replacement. So maintainers really work.
Maybe you've already seen these, but just in case:
About putting trickle charger/maintainers on the battery and how to make it easier by adding a trickle charger wire:
https://www.f150lightningforum.com/forum/threads/charging-12v-battery.16979/
The maintainer negative should be connected downstream of the BMS sensor as shown about, or to any chassis ground - just DO NOT connect it to the actual negative battery terminal which would by-pass the BMS sensor.
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