Awakening a dead battery

Awakening a dead battery

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Discussion

surveyor

Original Poster:

18,139 posts

191 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
The battery is relatively new, but no charger want's to know it after the car has been parked for a month. A new battery is 10% of it's value.

Any magic ideas before I splurge?

Gericho

545 posts

10 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
Buy a jump starter?

DonkeyApple

59,048 posts

176 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
surveyor said:
The battery is relatively new, but no charger want's to know it after the car has been parked for a month. A new battery is 10% of it's value.

Any magic ideas before I splurge?
Over the years of having this exact problem I've had the best success using a ctek or similar battery conditioner. I've always assumed that it works because it's not trying to force the charge in to the same degree as a proper charger.

I suspect much depends on whether it has been 100% flat for a while or whether there is just a fraction of charge left in it?

Edited by DonkeyApple on Monday 23 September 14:10

Matt_T

520 posts

81 months

Monday 23rd September
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I have a NOCO Genius on two of my cars, they're quite good at telling you if a battery is faulty/damaged/deceased or just flat. On one car I left the lights on for a week and the NOCO was able to recharge it.

Is your charger a smart charger with these functions of just a cheap halfords type charger? I believe the latter struggles with flat batteries whereas the former will charge it?

leyorkie

1,682 posts

183 months

Monday 23rd September
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New chargers don't like a flat battery so nothing happens when you connect them. I've had the problem and I got jump leads from another car/battery and then the charger started to charge. Then disconnect the jump leads and the charger will carry on charging. Most new chargers will go into trickle or maintenance charge once the battery is full

Lotobear

7,147 posts

135 months

Monday 23rd September
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DonkeyApple said:
surveyor said:
The battery is relatively new, but no charger want's to know it after the car has been parked for a month. A new battery is 10% of it's value.

Any magic ideas before I splurge?
Over the years of having this exact problem I've had the best success using a ctek or similar battery conditioner. I've always assumed that it works because it's not trying to force the charge in to the same degree as a proper charger.

I suspect much depends on whether it has been 100% flat for a while or whether there is just a fraction of charge left in it?

Edited by DonkeyApple on Monday 23 September 14:10
Was going to post the same, but whereas my Ctek would not recover it my £14.99 Aldi version did recover a fully discharged battery!

Haltamer

2,554 posts

87 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
Connect another decent battery with jump leads and leave it for a few hours; Should get enough juice to be recognised by a charger - Then just charge up both batteries.

Charlie Croker mk2

290 posts

107 months

Monday 23rd September
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Haltamer said:
Connect another decent battery with jump leads and leave it for a few hours; Should get enough juice to be recognised by a charger - Then just charge up both batteries.
This

or ctek
better still put a ctek on it before you leave it for a month next time

Limpet

6,520 posts

168 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
In your case, I'd jump start the car and leave the engine running for half an hour or so, then switch off and see if it restarts.

I've only had a CTEK fail once, and that was on our MX-5's battery which wouldn't restart the car after running it for 30-40 mins. The car had been sitting for over 2 years before we bought it. Even after several hours on the CTEK, the battery couldn't be brought up to the 12.6v necessary for the charger to move on to the main charging routine. We simply got a red light, and it wouldn't go any further.

I've had it recover a few "dead" batteries previously. They're good things to have, and can be left permanently connected on a car that isn't used regularly.


DonkeyApple

59,048 posts

176 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
Limpet said:
They're good things to have, and can be left permanently connected on a car that isn't used regularly.
So long as the car's not on the street. biggrin

One of the little annoyances of modern cars is that when I was you her I'd just lift the battery out of my car when I knew I'd not be using it for a while. This also helped ensure the car was still where you left it when you did eventually need it again. smile

havoc

30,892 posts

242 months

Monday 23rd September
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See if you can find a punchy jump-starter where you can bypass the cut-out limits - that was my problem when a battery went properly-flat - the jump-starter's cut-out wasn't letting it register.

Once it's started, then the usual rules apply - run it for a bit to get some charge in, then put it on a CTEK or similar and see if it recovers properly.

996TT02

3,326 posts

147 months

Monday 23rd September
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leyorkie said:
New chargers don't like a flat battery so nothing happens when you connect them. I've had the problem and I got jump leads from another car/battery and then the charger started to charge. Then disconnect the jump leads and the charger will carry on charging. Most new chargers will go into trickle or maintenance charge once the battery is full
This worked for me, or else use an analog old skool charger with nothing but an (analog) ammeter on the display. Those will even attempt to charge the household pets.

Mr-B

3,876 posts

201 months

Monday 23rd September
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Lotobear said:
Was going to post the same, but whereas my Ctek would not recover it my £14.99 Aldi version did recover a fully discharged battery!
I have had success with an Aldi/Lidl special too. Had to leave it for a couple of days but it revived an absolutely flat battery. I think I may have had to connect a very old school jump starter to get it to recognise the battery first too IIRC.

itcaptainslow

3,858 posts

143 months

Monday 23rd September
quotequote all
Haltamer said:
Connect another decent battery with jump leads and leave it for a few hours; Should get enough juice to be recognised by a charger - Then just charge up both batteries.
This with bells on. Has worked numerous times for me - the trickle charge provided by the conditioner when it sees a "good" battery massages the knackered one back into life.

BertBert

19,701 posts

218 months

Monday 23rd September
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996TT02 said:
This worked for me, or else use an analog old skool charger with nothing but an (analog) ammeter on the display. Those will even attempt to charge the household pets.
This is exactly what I have got (without the pets). I have used it a few time when the CTEK said "nah, too low".

dhutch

15,280 posts

204 months

Tuesday 24th September
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Yeah its on 0v then you need some what to jump start the charge for most smart chargers.

Either a smart charger with a 'from zero' option., or another battery, dumb charger, bump the car, etc.

If its not been flat long, or your selling the car, it might do what you need.
But generally its its been a few months its a pretty solid way to kill a lead acid battery.

Often scrapyards will sell you, or even swap you, you knackered battery for one of the better ones in their pile.

mario328

148 posts

133 months

Tuesday 24th September
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This week, Lidl are doing their £14.99 CTEK clone, I've had the Aldi version for some time and it works well on car batteries that have gone flat.
See:https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/ultimate-speed-car-motorcycle-battery-charger/p10017945

dhutch

15,280 posts

204 months

Tuesday 24th September
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mario328 said:
This week, Lidl are doing their £14.99 CTEK clone, I've had the Aldi version for some time and it works well on car batteries that have gone flat.
See: https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/ultimate-speed-car-motorc...
Cant fault that for price. I might not trust leaving it on my pride and joy 24/7/365 but for the odd charge on a runabout motor, happy days.

I have a 5A CTEK and a 5A Noco and they are both good kit, but not cheap these days.

classicaholic

1,909 posts

77 months

Tuesday 24th September
quotequote all
dhutch said:
mario328 said:
This week, Lidl are doing their £14.99 CTEK clone, I've had the Aldi version for some time and it works well on car batteries that have gone flat.
See: https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/ultimate-speed-car-motorc...
Cant fault that for price. I might not trust leaving it on my pride and joy 24/7/365 but for the odd charge on a runabout motor, happy days.

I have a 5A CTEK and a 5A Noco and they are both good kit, but not cheap these days.
I bought 4 of the Aldi ones a couple of years ago and they are very good for the money, I keep one in the campervan and it has saved the day for another van, well worth the money.

Wacky Racer

38,979 posts

254 months

Tuesday 24th September
quotequote all
One word. Optimate.