Car Battery Charger | Using a trickle charger for car battery – can you drive with it while connected?


Using a trickle charger for car battery – can you drive with it while connected?

My car battery slowly gets drained if i dont drive the car within 2 dys or so, if i connect a solar trickle charger can i keep it connected all the time, even when im driving or would i have to connect/disconnect or add a switch so that i can turn it off when the car is not in use




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6 Responses to “Using a trickle charger for car battery – can you drive with it while connected?”

  1. Jeffrey

    how long is your cord?

  2. ken k

    why dont you fix the real problem like a new batt?????? whats going to happen/welllllllllllllllllllllll usually you take the alt out and with that toy on it sooner rather than later/electric is nothing to fool with/seen more than one go down in flames

  3. Sableline

    No the alternator will be charging and a trickle charge, you will blow the battery up literally.As there will be no voltage control. You may also be breaking the law by making it unsafe to use on a public road

  4. bmwrider001

    yes, I have one on my class C motorhome, you wouldn’t even know it is there!

  5. mister ss

    don’t drive with it connected.

  6. BDBatteries.com

    YES AND NO :) What kind of batteries?

    Flooded batteries self discharge at 10% for the first day, and 10% every 30 days thereafter. Overcharging results in water loss, simply add water during maintenance cycle, no big deal. A TRICKLE CHARGER IS GOOD HERE.
    http://www.rv-batteries.com/services.php

    AGM batteries self discharge at 2% for the first day, and 2% every 30 days thereafter. Overcharging these batteries is really bad, you can’t add water. So an unregulated trickle charger is bad in this scenario.
    http://www.rv-batteries.com/services.php

    HOW DOES IT WORK?
    First off, your trickle charger (probably at 13.1v), will be less than the voltage of the alternator (14.4v). The alternator will actually charge the battery, when the car is driving, the trickle charger will hardly be noticed. The solar panel, with a lower voltage will not affect the system much.

    Second, the amperage from the trickle charger normally isn’t sufficient to blow any fuses. However, if you have a few of the tiny ones in your system, you should watch for this.

    RESULT:
    No blown up batteries….batteries resist a charge when they are full. However if you charge a battery that is already full, the electrolyte boils off.

    CAVEATS:
    The solar panel, may have a diode, if not DO ADD ONE. If you don’t have a diode (one way door for electricity) between the panel and vehicle electrical system, you can blow it up. The high output from the alternator driving power through the solar panel isn’t good.
    Bright side, they are only $20.
    http://www.bdbatteries.com/diodes.php

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