Mickey_Fx
Veteran Member
This is an old thread. Reading all the post what I see is a lack of understanding of how lead acid batteries are charged and the charging system found on our Yanmars.
LA batteries are charged via constant potential (voltage). In electrical terms, voltage is pressure. If the charge source is fixed, the charge rate varies with the voltage difference between the source and the battery. As the battery voltage rises due to charging, the lower the voltage difference so the lower the charge rate. When source and battery voltage equal the will be no charging taking place. Think of charging like siphoning water between 2 buckets, one full the other empty. The rate of transfer between the full and empty buckets is greatest to begin with and declines as the water levels near each other and flow stops when they are the same.
Now for our Yanmar charging systems. From the schematics I've seen, all have only 2 wires that connect between the alt and the "voltage regulator". Notice, there is no direct connection betwen the alt and battery. With this system no real regulation of the voltage can be made by the alt. The function of the VR is to rectify the AC voltage to DC. It regulates the voltage down stream by shunting some of the power to ground until the set regulated voltage is reached. From a practical standpoint this is the reason why these alt are so small power wise. They function the same way you find in small engines we find in lawn/garden tractors.
LA batteries when in normal condition have very small self discharge rates, ~.1%/day of remaining capacity. On my garden tractors they sit for about 5 months over winter and they never see a charger. At most, they see a few mins from a charger while I check fuel & oil levels before starting the first time in the spring. They always have adequate power to start the equipment and the batteries last at least 5 yrs. The Yanmar sees some use over the winter months but never sees a charger and never a problem. If you can't keep your battery charged over the winter without it being discharged when time comes to put the equipment back in use, you likely have some problem(s) that need addressing.
LA batteries are charged via constant potential (voltage). In electrical terms, voltage is pressure. If the charge source is fixed, the charge rate varies with the voltage difference between the source and the battery. As the battery voltage rises due to charging, the lower the voltage difference so the lower the charge rate. When source and battery voltage equal the will be no charging taking place. Think of charging like siphoning water between 2 buckets, one full the other empty. The rate of transfer between the full and empty buckets is greatest to begin with and declines as the water levels near each other and flow stops when they are the same.
Now for our Yanmar charging systems. From the schematics I've seen, all have only 2 wires that connect between the alt and the "voltage regulator". Notice, there is no direct connection betwen the alt and battery. With this system no real regulation of the voltage can be made by the alt. The function of the VR is to rectify the AC voltage to DC. It regulates the voltage down stream by shunting some of the power to ground until the set regulated voltage is reached. From a practical standpoint this is the reason why these alt are so small power wise. They function the same way you find in small engines we find in lawn/garden tractors.
LA batteries when in normal condition have very small self discharge rates, ~.1%/day of remaining capacity. On my garden tractors they sit for about 5 months over winter and they never see a charger. At most, they see a few mins from a charger while I check fuel & oil levels before starting the first time in the spring. They always have adequate power to start the equipment and the batteries last at least 5 yrs. The Yanmar sees some use over the winter months but never sees a charger and never a problem. If you can't keep your battery charged over the winter without it being discharged when time comes to put the equipment back in use, you likely have some problem(s) that need addressing.