I have a crap load of batteries to take care of, so I've got a decent feel for what works and what doesn't over the years.good points, sounds you're busy with than many tenders at once.
Same situation here. I've got at least 9 chargers or maintainers that I can think of. Mostly BatteryMINDer, with a couple of Noco units.I have a crap load of batteries to take care of, so I've got a decent feel for what works and what doesn't over the years.
Not saying that I'm doing everything right, but having had several batteries last for over 20 years apparently I'm not completely wrong either.
I had a Battery Minder on my dump trailer battery for almost 20 years. It worked fine for all that time and then one day it didn't. it got hot and started to smell. Don't know if it would have caused a fire or not but I caught it before it did.I had a battery minder that discharged a battery and won't buy another.
12v 1amp, Battery Minder Plus.
Not fun to leave a charger plugged in and go to do the lawn and the battery is dead.
Put another brand on the battery and got it back to life, so it wasn't the battery.
Lights worked just fine.
I have a bunch of older Battery Tenders, never had problems with those.
Mine was less than 6 months old, wouldn't minded if it was a few years old.I had a Battery Minder on my dump trailer battery for almost 20 years. It worked fine for all that time and then one day it didn't. it got hot and started to smell. Don't know if it would have caused a fire or not but I caught it before it did.
I can't fault the Battery Minder though, since I got 11 years out of the first trailer battery and it's replacement has been working for almost 9. I couldn't get a replacement Battery Minder at the time due to stock issues so I Replaced it with a Noco mainly due to price, availability and customer reviews.
Battery tenders (and most smart maintainers) fail to charge completely dead batteries because they require a minimum voltage (typically around 3 to 4 volts) to detect a proper connection. If the battery is too deeply discharged, the device's safety mechanisms prevent it from starting to avoid reverse polarity or damage.
You can also hook up a good battery to the dead one, and after 15-30 minutes remove the good one from the system.To charge a totally flat battery I first hook it up to an old transformer type charger for an hour, then the BatteryMINDer or Noco can take over from there.
rScotty
I left my pickup for a couple of months, and when I got to it, the door wouldn't even unlock, I had to use the metal key to get in to open the hood...