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So my dirtbike has been sitting for 2 months. I connect the battery tender and it goes green immediately? Surely the battery can't be fully charged after that time in unheated garage?
If it's a AGM battery it could be.
If the battery was initially deep charged properly (and don't EVER let a retailer tell you it has), it was stored fully charged and there's not a drain on it, it sure can hold a charge. My wife's ATV has sat since LAST WINTER under the same conditions as your dirty bike, battery cables still attached. I slapped the trickle charger on it this past weeked and it showed fully charged. I disconnected it, turned it over, and in sub-zero temps, it fired right up!
Did you grit your teeth and try to look like Clint Fuckin' Eastwood?
Or did you lisp it all hangfisted like a fuckin' flower?
Well, that would be cool if it holds that long. The previous owner set it up with a battery tender connection, so I didn't bother removing the battery (like I do with all my other bikes)
The other bike batteries are in my heated basement... and every couple of weeks I put the charger on them... and it starts off red.
Just seemed odd that the battery out in the cold would hold it's charge better?
I had a snowmobile battery do the same thing, when I tried to fire up the sled, it turned over a couple times and then the battery wouldn't crank it any more, I think a cell is shot so it shows it fully charged but really isn't, new battery started sled fine
Or your trickle charger is broken...
"I'd rather ride a slow bike fast than a fast bike slow"
Bikes: Ducati: 748 (Track) Honda: RC31 (Race/street)/ CRF 110 Mini Moto/ Hawk Endurance Racer Kawasaki: ZXR1200R
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EX# X
mine does that sometimes. leave it on for awhile and see what happens. sometimes they seem to get a false signal. i have a battery tender jr.
Jelled electrolyte batteries are different than AGM which stands for Absorbed Glass Mat. In an AGM, a type of fiberglass mesh sits between the lead plates in the battery and the electrolyte is suspended within it. The big advantage to them is they can't spill since the glass mat is only 95% saturated. They also have an extremely low self discharge rate that averages between 1-3% per month and are highly resistant to shock and vibration which makes them good choices for all types of recreational vehicles.
I have no idea what comes with your KTM but there is a pretty reasonable chance it's AGM since quite a few modern motorcycle batteries are set up this way.
"...i would seriously bite somebody right in the balls..." -bump909
Mine is a Deltran and full green means it's 100% charged...
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Let's not get overly complicated here. If it's fully charged and has never been discharged, it can sit in freezing weather without discharging. Like I said, my wife's ATV hasn't been ridden since Feb. 2010 and fired right up. Proper initial deep charge, never been discharged, didn't need any charging. And it started in the sub-zero temps we had last weekend...
Did you grit your teeth and try to look like Clint Fuckin' Eastwood?
Or did you lisp it all hangfisted like a fuckin' flower?
I hear ya, Jay.
It's just in all my years, this is the first battery doing this.
Even on a really good batter... I would expect maybe the battery tender to go red for a bit (even if it's just 5 minutes) - then go green.
Like I said, even the batteries that are fully charged and sitting in my heated basement do this after a few weeks.
I fear that something is different because this battery is in the bike and attached to all the electrics?
turn on something electrical on the bike like a headlight, this should immedialtely make the charger drop showing full charge... if not the battery is NBG
Graham
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee — that will do them in"