Steve F wrote:rasp wrote:if you wish to take a look at electric golf carts or other electric transportation they run batteries in parallel, some use two six volters in series and several pairs of these in parallel. caterpillar uses two 12 volters in parallel and then another pair in series to get 24 volts.
where i work the emergency diesel fire pump is wired wire a series parallel combo of 12 volt batteries, if it were a bad idea then the insurance company would not allow it.
must be a lot of uneducated folks out there.
A lot of these situations the batteries would be on a float charge the majority of the time, even the golf carts would go out for a round and then get plugged back in at the end of the day, their capacity would be greater than what could be expected to be used in a day. I don't think in any of these situations the batteries would get charged and then run close to flat and then charged again etc. And I bet the insurance company has a maximum life on the ones running the pump and they have to be replaced regardless at a set interval, certainly computer battery backup ones do.
Basically I think it comes down to maintenance, if the batteries are high capacity, sit on a float charge most of the time and are well looked after they should last a longtime regardless of how many are hooked together. If you have two batteries, drain flat, charge, drain flat, charge etc then one will drop off quicker than the other and have a detrimental effect on the other.
One thing I've always wondered about is what about batteries like the little 9V ones that are basically multiple batteries wired together (AAAA size inside I think) they come in rechargeable and last for ages, is this whole thing different with NICad and NiMH batteries etc?
Cheers
Steve
batteries for the starter on the diesel emergency pump get checked on a regular basis and are changed out when they do not meet requirements. this does not have to do with age but condition of the battery itself.
they do, get all changed when one goes bad as it normally signals the end of life is around the corner for the rest.