Condensation....cold air hitting a warmer surface (the battery residual heat after charging) producing condensation and then the battery left to cool and the wet turning to ice.....I don't need to tell you that if the battery freezes internally it will be the death of it!..beware!
You're right Bren....having one of those senior moments again...in that case it was probably a cold battery and the warmer moist air in the cab causing condensation....then freezing.....
Hmmmm...your average 4 amp home charger will take an awful long time to create enough activity to actualy feel warmth from the battery. I usually find mine only starts to feel slightly warm after 8 hours or so (I've got 2 chargers 8 & 12amps), depending on how flat the battery was in the first place of course.
I know this is an obvious statement but it is best to keep car batteries fully charged as the 'freezing point' is lower (freezes earlier, on a discharged battery) some figures I have just been reading state -15C at 1.15 specific gravity (pretty flat) whilst electrolyte freezes considerably lower when charged.
BTW....My dad comes from Affoltern, Ottenbach Nr Zurich......
the battery wasn't anywhere near totally flat to start with, it was turning the engine over pretty well but the bus wasn't starting.
when i plugged the charger in it was charging at 6 amps for an hour then went down to about 3.5.
after 23 hours it wasn't charging any more.
the last time i had a starting problem and ran this same battery down it was pretty warm after 24 hours charging.
freshly charged it checked out pretty well on the tester but i'll put it in the bus again soon and test it using the starter and with headlights etc switched on.
oorwullie wrote:the battery wasn't anywhere near totally flat to start with, it was turning the engine over pretty well but the bus wasn't starting.
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Well it seems like you have answered your own question ^^^^^^ turns over pretty well but isn't starting! it ain't the battery then is it....
The battery supplies the starter and ignition....turns over fast (tick) so look at ignition, fuel or basic mechanical fitness (compressions) or a combination.