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Optima batteries, 4/10/18...battery status update

I dunno how I missed this thread!

A friend of mine has got an ancient (I'd guess mid 90s) Yellow Top in his 67 Olds Delta 88 rag top with an Olds 425 in it. The car is never driven in the winter, ever, so it literally only gets driven for 4 months of the year, and maybe only a couple weekends during that time. I know for a fact that he does zero maintenance on that battery while it is connected to the car all winter in cold storage. Despite that it still starts the car every spring.

I had discharged it pretty much almost to dead once when it died on the side of the road a year or so back. I boosted it with my truck after we finally found the problem and repaired it, then drove it back to my place (hour long drive or so). The car wouldn't start when he went to leave, so I tossed one of my lead acid batteries in for him and sent him on his way. I came online and found Optima's instructions for bringing the thing back to life. Low and behold, that battery bounced right back! Load testing showed it actually slightly above the advertised CCA rating.

Put that battery back in his car and it is still good!

That said, we've got a set of Mastercraft (Canadian Tire brand, similar to Wal Mart) spiral cell batteries in my Father's truck and they are absolute garbage. I've had them changed under warantee 3 times now and the latest set are already shot after just a few months. I've tried Optima's instructions to try and bring them back, but they just won't do it. The worst of it is that Dad actually does use a battery maintainer as the truck isn't driven very frequently, and it is kept stored in a heated garage whenever it isn't used. I've checked the truck for unusual current draw when it is all powered down and only found about 30mA of draw, so it isn't something in the truck killing the batteries either.

I imagine we'll be putting the wet cell batteries from my Tahoe into his truck, and I am thinking I'd like to put a set of yellow top batteries in their place. I like to use my Tahoe for camping and such, which regularly sees me running an inverter all night to charge accessories etc and don't want to be left dead out in the bush somewhere. That, and the fact that they don't spill acid out if you get yourself into a hairy situation is a nice touch!
 
David,

Don't tell Edwin, but I've voted for you twice so far (you can vote every day). Between Facebook, Twitter and mailing lists, Edwin does have a fairly large fan base, so it's not surprising that his story is getting votes. Russ, I would encourage your friend to submit their YellowTop story to our Power Stories.

Jim McIlvaine
eCare Manager, OPTIMA Batteries, Inc.
www.powerpacknation.com
 
I was casually browsing the forums last night when I read Russel's post as he mentioned optima's method to revive a battery, this was new to me. I have two optima red-tops that have been sitting dead in the garage for 4 and 6 years. I grabbed the 6 year old battery that was bought somewhere in 2002 then used for a couple of years before the vehicle sat for a while, discharged the battery and all attempts to charge it failed. Same story with the second battery, thought it was beyond salvage and out of warranty so we just bought regular batteries to replace them.

After reading the method on the optima website, I decided to try it out this morning. The 9 year old battery that sat discharged for 6 years measured 2.9 volts. Hooked it up in parallel with a good battery and after a few tries since the charger kept giving me errors, the amp reading began to climb! It climbed 0.1 amp every few minutes. About an hour later it was reading 2.5 amps. I removed the good battery and the amp meter kept climbing slowly at the same rate. Another hour later, its now at 14 amps. I unplugged it and measured the battery voltage again, 11.4 volts! Plugged a headlight to the battery to test, it was bright and didnt dim after couple of minutes. I set it back on the charger and im writing this as it continues to charge. Will check up on it every hour or so to see how its doing but its looking good so far.
 
Amtek, I'm glad to hear that you may be able to recover your batteries. If they do end up holding a charge, you should definitely submit your story and we'll try to turn your batteries into battery rock stars...if that's possible.

David, if you can get past Edwin Evers and his legion of fans, I think you'll be tough to beat (especially if your friends here keep voting). You're at 64% now.

Jim McIlvaine
eCare Manager, OPTIMA Batteries, Inc.
www.powerpacknation.com
 
Voted again Dave.

Jim I have brought my optima yellow top back from the dead.

Got it from a tire shop been on the shelf for like 5 years before I got it. Put it in no problems. Ran it for a couple years, started getting a drain on it not sure what it was but after a while it quit holding a charge. Even disconnecting the battery after you shut the rig off and reconnecting it again produced the same results.

Put it on the proper charger went to the website charged accordingly and well it lasted a while longer, finally got tired of charging it. Pulled it out. Found a red top for a screaming deal, bought it.

Now this yellow top sat around my garage for probably 2 years, I decided one day to put it on the charger and leave it and see what it would do.

Charger said the battery was at 2% left. Well it charged up to about 50% the next three nights but then the charger would read bad battery.

Me being a cheapskate kept trying, after 4 trys by dang if it didn't take a charge. A full charge. My buddy is using it in his Ford right now that gets driven maybe once every couple weeks, it has been in there since spring and has started every single time.

I also brought a red top back from the dead this same way
 

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