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Skyryder
6th April 2005, 21:13
Anyone know where I can get some distilled water for a battery top up. Chemists use to sell this but all I can get from them is purified water and this is not the same.

Skyryder

woody68
6th April 2005, 21:27
Try battery town or some like that. :mobile:

Sensei
6th April 2005, 21:35
You will need to get the right stuff from a battery shop If you put water into your battery you will water down the mix so you need to get a mix of water & acid from the Battery people or your battery will slowly shit it's self as there will be more water than Acid . Mate run's Auto shop & gives me made up stuff Perfect mixture . They have it in stock
SENSEI

Skyryder
6th April 2005, 21:40
Thanks for that. Never thought of the obvious; a battery shop. Normaly go to Marshalls. Think they are still in buisiness

Skyryder

Silage
6th April 2005, 21:44
Anyone know where I can get some distilled water for a battery top up.

You live in Christchurch so just let a couple of litres run from your kitchen tap and the rest is as pure as a battery needs. How much difference to the life of a battery does it make?

Tap water is probably not so good in other cities with more metals and carbonates in their water.

chickenfunkstar
6th April 2005, 21:48
Would rain water work?
I've put it in my car battery before, seemed to work fine.

Motu
6th April 2005, 22:31
H2Go - one for you...one for me...one for you...one for me....

Hitcher
6th April 2005, 22:57
Rainwater, H2Go, Evian, Kiwi Blue... It's all good.

gman
9th April 2005, 21:27
rain water is all good for batterys but charge it up first then add the water.otherwise youll water the acid down too much and itll shit itself.

Jeremy
9th April 2005, 22:03
Eh, water down the acid? That's a good one. Where do you think the acid goes in your battery, it can't evaporate. If you've managed to get lead deposits by letting the water level drop to far down then your battery is screwed anyway so you'll have to get a new one.

Rain water != distilled water.
H2Go != distilled water.
Tap water certainly isn't distilled water.

All of the above contain stuff that will precipitate with battery acid and you'll destroy your battery. If your having difficulty getting distilled water than ask your local garage, school or University if you can buy some off them (and where they get it from). If you are really really desperate than you can always distill it yourself. Go boil some water and collect the steam and wait for it to condense, it'll be slow as hell, but if your that desperate than go for it, just be careful.

Skyryder
9th April 2005, 22:15
Got some from the science lab. I work as a groundsman at one of the local High schools. Just never thought of them. Now where's the ethynole alkahole I want to go faster.

Skyryder

gav
9th April 2005, 23:34
Isnt boiled water as good as anything ie distilled?

inlinefour
10th April 2005, 00:13
Sells distilled water esp for batteries. It comes in a sipper bottle which is rather handy for filling up the batteries through the small holes.
From my understanding, a new battery needs to be filled with acid, I don't remember the correct chemical composition at this time of day. Once a battery is allowed to run dry it will expire and you need to check that each cell is intact and the voltage, Modern batteries mostly are sealed units that require no top ups. Although I resisted for as long as I could, my last 2 batteries where sealed units and I have had no problems with them :niceone:

Owl Morris
10th April 2005, 01:30
I just use the water out of my dehumidifier for top ups, never had a battery problem with the bike,car or all the tractors and mowers at work.

XTC
10th April 2005, 07:21
Never open a sealed battery......

Skyryder
10th April 2005, 11:52
Isnt boiled water as good as anything ie distilled?

Only if you collect the steam. Essentialy distillied water is recycled water from condensation. Then the water is the distalate.

Skyryder

Ixion
10th April 2005, 12:28
Sells distilled water esp for batteries. It comes in a sipper bottle which is rather handy for filling up the batteries through the small holes.
From my understanding, a new battery needs to be filled with acid, I don't remember the correct chemical composition at this time of day. ..

New batteries require to be filled with electrolyte, which is basically sulphuric acid diluted with water.

Because a battery gets quite warm sometimes over time a certain amount of water will evaporate leaving too strong an acid . So you add distilled or deionised water. This would not normally be very much (a few cc) and never at all with a sealed or gel battery

If the electrolyte level is low because some has spilt, you need to top up with electrolyte (acid) not with water

KahuRangiKea
12th September 2008, 16:36
It is always best to use distilled water. Rain water is said to be useable if distilled is not available but it is not as good especially if there is air pollution in the area. I doubt whether even Christchurch tap water would be suitable. Using tap water won't kill a battery but it will reduce its life.


Only add acid if there has been a spill - it does not evaporate.

Water needs topping up because it gets lost through electrolysis 2H2O -> 2H2 + O2 . This only happens when the battery is overcharged. Some overcharging is good as it helps prevent sulphation, the major killer of batteries and it mixes the electrolyte when it bubbles preventing stratification. But overcharging also causes degradation of the lead plates. Overcharging is a compromise, and about 10 minutes of bubbling at the end of a trickle charge is considered about right.

If a vehicle is only used occasionally it is best to charge it weekly, or at least monthly. When battery performance starts to degrade due to sulphation you can greatly extend the life by using an anti-sulphation product like "recharge". Comes in two sizes a $25 container and a $55 container. The larger one is best value and costs about $1 to condition a motorcycle battery and $4 for a car battery. De-sulphation is best done as soon as battery degradation is noticed or it will not be so effective.

slofox
15th September 2008, 12:45
You will need to get the right stuff from a battery shop If you put water into your battery you will water down the mix so you need to get a mix of water & acid from the Battery people or your battery will slowly shit it's self as there will be more water than Acid . SENSEI

Not true - the reason the electrolyte level drops in a battery is that some of the WATER evaporates through charging/discharging, not the ACID. This leaves the electrolyte more concentrated than it should be. Adding water brings the concentration back to where it should be....'tis basic general science.......

vifferman
15th September 2008, 12:54
Rain water is not as clean as the advertising dudes make out. Noo Zilund has a maritime climate, so the rainwater has a relatively high salt content, especially close to the sea, and especially when it first starts to rain. There is also a lot of pollen, dust, etc. in rain water. You're actually better off using tap water than rain water.
I buy distilled water from the supermarket in 10L casks - it's cheaper'n all that bottled stuff. I used to use it in my bike batteries, but now all of our vehicle batteries are sealed so I use it only in the steam iron (stops scale build-up) and in the bike's radiator when I mix up coolant.