One terminal off is fine.
One terminal off is fine.
Riding cheap crappy old bikes badly since 1987
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Thanks fellas. I finally got it off. with one fatigued forearm and one burst blood vessel later.![]()
[QUOTE=mattian;1130226820]ok so I've disconnected the negative terminal but these pricks that installed my new battery have tightened the screw on the positive terminal so tight its not budging ! to the point where i've almost burred the head of the screw trying to undo it.
to anyway gezz i use impact driver for this very reason just tap should budge it
The old jap engine cases used philips bolts what a pain well erly honda singles did
Just wondering. Is it ok to try and charge the battery with the positive terminal still connected?
why whould you want just undo it oh yeah the bolt well take out the main fuse if theres on the main red power cable out
Other wise spray little crc screw cant be that bad how hell can torque a philips screw bolt oh yeah shold be nut
on the other side udo that way holding screw head in the other end
A lead-acid battery usually refers to a wet cell battery, as in, liquid acid.
Technically a gell, or dry (eg AGM) is still effectively lead and acid, just not liquid acid any more.
There is no circuit with one end disconnected. An electrical system requires a circuit, from positive, through stuff, to negative. Since the negative (or positive, or both) of the bike is not connected to the charger, there is no circuit and no flow of current.
Thank-you all for your input. Currently charging along quite nicely. Must nearly be done because its been 6 hours now and the light hasnt come on yet, to indicate that its fully charged. Its says to expect 5 to 10 hours of charging time.
I'm probably not the best person to be asked that question, I'm so lazy that I don't bother disconnecting either terminal for a charge and use whatever charger I can find at the time (currently a red shed one which I've managed to hang onto for a while now without one of the siblings wandering off with it...)
But in an ideal world, yeah probably 10% would get you the best charge - but in the real world more than that is fine as long as you don't go so very overboard that you are cooking your battery.
Lead acid chemistry batteries are pretty tolerant of abuse, which is good for lazy bastards like me.
hey guys just another question. Will the battery re-charge fully while riding it?
Its been 10 hours now and, although the green light hasnt come on to indicate that the battery is fully charged, the battery is making that bubbling/fizzing noise.
I figure that if the battery is charged up enough to get the bike going again will it recharge fully if I just put it in and ride it for a while?
Update : put it in after 10 hours. lights lit up but wouldnt turn over. Put it back onto charge. Im guessing i have to wait another few hours.
"Power" only flows where there is a difference in potential.
If only the positive terminal is connected to the bike, then potential difference between the positive battery terminal and the bike is zero - no current will flow.
If you attach a charger to the battery the potential difference between the bike and the battery terminal is still zero.
You can verify the potential difference is zero by measuring the voltage between the only remaining connected battery terminal (positive in this case) and the rest of the bike.
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