In a Sulfated battery
(Or an Under-Charged Battery), All Cells should read Very Equal, but Low readings.
In a Really Good Battery,
All cells will be EQUIL in Specific Gravity and at a charged level.
This Circuit will NOT Work for Desulfating a Single 6 Volt Battery.
But Two 6 Volt batteries could be Connected in Series.
And using one good Battery with the Desulfated battery is Best.
In Theory, with "Unlimited Sensitivity", and with a "PERFECT Battery", the meter
reading would always read "ZERO".
However, This will NEVER HAPPEN on a Real Battery.
And in Real Life, Smaller Lead Acid or Sealed Lead Acid Batteries will have Higher
Meter Readings than Large Car Batteries.
This Process may be anything from a "Day or Two" for just General Battery Maintance,
and up to "Several Months for a really Bad Sulfated Battery".
And the battery Should have a Reasonable Charge on it for Both the Desulfator & Tester
to work.
It should be Greater than 11 Volts, Before you start this Desulfation process.
Otherwise the Tester Meter Circuit won't work properly.
NOTE:
Normally I recommend the Drive control to be set to a 50% rotation.
And than set the Vu Meter to give a 0 Db Reading.
Assuming you have a Sulfation Problem, Eventually the Reading should go Lower.
Comparing Batteries:
If you have Two Batteries of the same A/H Rating and Size and both Fully Charged,
you can set the Sensitivity control to give a specific reading.
(If using a meter obtained from me, Possibly a "0 VU" reading on the first battery.)
Than Without changing Either the "Sensitivity" or "Drive" Controls, connect this unit to
the second battery
and get a Comparative Test Reading.
The Battery with the LOWER Reading, Will be the Better Battery.
As an Example:
I have Two 12 Volt 4 A/H Batteries. One is about 12 Years Old and One is Quite New.
Starting with the Old One and Setting the Drive Trimmer pot to 50% and the Sensitivity
Trimmer so it reads 0 dB.
Than transferring the Leads to the Newer one, The reading is down below -10dB.
However the Old one is Just Plain OLD, and Not a Sulfation Problem.
NOTE: The Range of Adjustment for the Sensitivity Control was "Arbitrary", determined
by me.
** Since I Didn't have a "NEW, EXCELLENT QUALITY, BIG Car Battery", this Range of
Gain,
was just a Guess on my part, "Based on tests, using Batteries I presently have".
And so far it seem to be a Good Adjustment Range.
Important NOTE:
I Definately Advise you to Put a 1 or 2 Amp, InLine Fuse between the Battery and this
Circuit.
(Because if either "C5" or "C6" were to Fail, this will protect the Choke and Battery)
And a 1 Amp, InLine Fuse between the Power Supply and this Circuit is also
Recommended.
A "Picture Overlay".
NOTE: There have been a Few Minor Changes, since this picture was taken.
"A Simple Power Supply for this Desulfator"
This Article is "Subject to Modifications"