Re: 8 volt battery C-1
Thanks, Duke! Think of a battery holding charge as a pail holding water. In order to put water into the pail you must pour from ABOVE the upper rim of the pail. The analogy holds for charging a battery...
In order to restore lost charge (charge in motion is called 'current'), the driving voltage has to be higher than the battery's nominal voltage level. So, a voltage regulator dialed in for charging 6V batteries will be at a disadvantage when it tries to maintain or 'top off' an 8V battery.
WAY back when, it was reasonably common to get better engine cranking performance by substituting an 8V tractor battery for a car's 6V battery. But, the good ole electrical shop boys who did these swaps also 'tweaked' the voltage regulator to match.
It just turns out that 8V is close enough to the loci of charging conditions for a properly designed 6V system to work. But, you are 'pushing' the v-reg and generator towards their outer limits...
Since batteries are always charging/discharging in an automotive setting, the absolute voltage level of the electrical system is dynamic. Various electrical components in the system HAVE to be designed to work across the system's dynamic range and are therefore tolerant of different specfic voltage levels.
That's why the 'tractor trick' works. The 8V level falls within the typical range of a 6V system's variance. But, if the voltage regulator is dialed in for 6V nominal operation, the 8V battery will be maintained below its peak...
Thanks, Duke! Think of a battery holding charge as a pail holding water. In order to put water into the pail you must pour from ABOVE the upper rim of the pail. The analogy holds for charging a battery...
In order to restore lost charge (charge in motion is called 'current'), the driving voltage has to be higher than the battery's nominal voltage level. So, a voltage regulator dialed in for charging 6V batteries will be at a disadvantage when it tries to maintain or 'top off' an 8V battery.
WAY back when, it was reasonably common to get better engine cranking performance by substituting an 8V tractor battery for a car's 6V battery. But, the good ole electrical shop boys who did these swaps also 'tweaked' the voltage regulator to match.
It just turns out that 8V is close enough to the loci of charging conditions for a properly designed 6V system to work. But, you are 'pushing' the v-reg and generator towards their outer limits...
Since batteries are always charging/discharging in an automotive setting, the absolute voltage level of the electrical system is dynamic. Various electrical components in the system HAVE to be designed to work across the system's dynamic range and are therefore tolerant of different specfic voltage levels.
That's why the 'tractor trick' works. The 8V level falls within the typical range of a 6V system's variance. But, if the voltage regulator is dialed in for 6V nominal operation, the 8V battery will be maintained below its peak...
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