Page 8 of 11 FirstFirst ... 678910 ... LastLast
Results 71 to 80 of 105

Thread: Replacement battery for a D4

  1. #71
    TonyC is offline Wizard Silver Subscriber
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    NE Victoria
    Posts
    1,413
    Total Downloaded
    32.83 MB
    Quote Originally Posted by josh.huber View Post
    Nope, the truck let go of the clutch and locked up the flywheel housing. Had to tow it back and pull the box, went back out with the same battery's. The cruiser dropped the clutch slave and welded itself in gear.
    Both starters were still having a go until I sent them to heaven. Again. CCA is great. Unless the starter comes up against a worthy opponent.
    I had a mate with a super high compression V8 that wouldn't start.. He put a bigger battery in, std starter.. Melted two before he learnt about high torque starters..
    So you had two electric motors that were jammed, and you keep pouring power into them till they burnt out, and the cause was the battery ??

    Tony

  2. #72
    josh.huber Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by TonyC View Post
    So you had two electric motors that were jammed, and you keep pouring power into them till they burnt out, and the cause was the battery ??

    Tony
    Honestly, I apologize for trying to add my experience to this post and the question posed.
    Don't worry about it. This is pointless. Im wrong, Delco are wrong.

    Simple

  3. #73
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Perth
    Posts
    4,335
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by TonyC View Post
    So you had two electric motors that were jammed, and you keep pouring power into them till they burnt out, and the cause was the battery ??

    Tony
    The question still remains, if the approved available CCA was all that was provided to the jammed starter, would the starter have survived without burnout? I cannot say.
    All I can say is that manufacturers of starter motors, not dual battery kits, or anything else, clearly document they have a limit on the CCA that they will support. I’d say they know more given they designed it, know the winding capability, and yes, they are designing it to survive edge cases, not just the average.

    The fact that I’m a perfect world where things operate as they should (eg engine starts when we push the button), doesn’t take away from the original question which is yes, there are limits to CCA in edge use cases, which is all the point I was making. The English language is a subtle thing.

    Again, the question was binary - can I have too much CCA - yes,

    However!!!

    What is the likelihood too much CCA will impact me in a Discovery? - one in a million. The answer to the question is still valid, no matter how unlikely or remote. To answer binary “no” simply shows ignorance or lack of understanding - something I admit to until I did a wealth of research on the topic. A qualified answer shows a depth of knowledge.
    2010 TDV6 3.0L Discovery 4 HSE
    2007 Audi RS4 (B7)

  4. #74
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Queensland
    Posts
    7,904
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by josh.huber View Post
    Honestly, I apologize for trying to add my experience to this post and the question posed.
    Don't worry about it. This is pointless. Im wrong, Delco are wrong.

    Simple
    Hi Josh and your post was not in question, it is just that you can also burn out a starter motor with the correct CCA rated battery.

  5. #75
    Join Date
    Nov 2018
    Location
    Hobart, Tasmania
    Posts
    561
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by drivesafe View Post
    Hi Josh and your post was not in question, it is just that you can also burn out a starter motor with the correct CCA rated battery.
    .......and Lucas starter motors in the 1950's and 60's would burn out just because they wanted to.....
    Before: Ser 2a LWB, Ser 3 S/W, 1979 RR 2 door, 1981 LR Stage 1 V8 (new), 1985 LR 110 V8 County (new), 2009 RRS TDV8
    Now: MY13 D4 TDV6. "E" rear diff. Cambo's magic Engine & Auto Tune. 1968 Austin 1800 Mk1 auto (my 5th)

  6. #76
    BradC is offline Super Moderator
    No one of consequence
    Supporter
    Join Date
    Mar 2018
    Location
    Perth (near Malaga)
    Posts
    3,546
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Ahhah!

    http://www.billavista.com/tech/Artic...tion-Guide.pdf

    Page 143 in the "Delco Remy Electrical Specifications & Selection Guide. Starters and Alternators"

    It is recognized the cranking current is determined by the cranking conditions such as temperature, oil viscosity, and battery state of charge. Given those same conditions, the cranking current will be approximately the same with the use of either the high CCA battery(s) or standard battery(s). The user must be able to be cognizant of the fact that high CCA battery(s) enable the operator to crank for a longer period of time while attempting to start the engine, which could result in high starter temperatures. Starter burnout can occur under abusive cranking conditions, regardless of the type of battery(s) used. Starter burnout can be prevented by following the starter manufacturer’s recommendations, i.e., crank for a maximum of 30 seconds followed by a rest period of two minutes; or by using a starter that is equipped with a thermal protector.
    The mechanical integrity of the starter can be severely taxed by greatly exceeding the CCA’s recommended by the engine manufacturer.
    An OCP starter (as referred to in the data sheet Jeff attached) has a thermal sensor in the motor and disables when overheated.

    So it's all about the ability to cook the starter based on "operator error".

  7. #77
    josh.huber Guest
    okay ill take the bait....

    i was going to write something that represented sarcasm here, but i have already bowed out of that

    you posted
    The mechanical integrity of the starter can be severely taxed by greatly exceeding the CCA’s recommended by the engine manufacturer.

    This line from the bottom of your quote sums me up nicely.. it actually stands behind everything i said...

    Jeffs quote doesnt Reference OCP starters, it references normal starters, it states that an OCP starter MUST be used whenever these CCA recommendations are exceeded. WHICH the D4 starter isnt

    JUST for peoples information as it has been said you cant fit a battery like those figures on a D4 in reference to what jeff posted.
    the 37mt is a 4.6kw starter with a limit of 1875CCA
    the starter in my D4 is 2.0kw and my SSB88Ti is 1100CCA. \

    so yes you can put a big battery in and they did.

    anyway, AGAIN unless your engine is shagged, its more likely corona virus will kill your starter then too many batteries.



  8. #78
    BradC is offline Super Moderator
    No one of consequence
    Supporter
    Join Date
    Mar 2018
    Location
    Perth (near Malaga)
    Posts
    3,546
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by josh.huber View Post
    Jeffs quote doesnt Reference OCP starters, it references normal starters, it states that an OCP starter MUST be used whenever these CCA recommendations are exceeded. WHICH the D4 starter isnt
    There was no bait in that, more an "ah hah, I've found an explanation written by the same people who put the disclaimer in the data sheet that explains it pretty clearly". The concept of the OCP starter is that it has in-built thermal protection. That is there to protect against either overload or operator error. I interpret (perhaps incorrectly) that implies that if you use a small enough battery and a non-protected starter, the battery will die before you kill the starter or at least give it a fighting chance.

    I read :

    "It is recognized the cranking current is determined by the cranking conditions such as temperature, oil viscosity, and battery state of charge. Given those same conditions, the cranking current will be approximately the same with the use of either the high CCA battery(s) or standard battery(s)."

    .. as "If you don't abuse the starter (either intentionally or mechanically) it doesn't matter what the battery is because it'll draw the same current regardless".

    anyway, AGAIN unless your engine is shagged, its more likely corona virus will kill your starter then too many batteries.
    This we agree on.

    Edit : I'll call it here.

  9. #79
    josh.huber Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by BradC View Post
    There was no bait in that, more an "ah hah, I've found an explanation written by the same people who put the disclaimer in the data sheet that explains it pretty clearly". The concept of the OCP starter is that it has in-built thermal protection. That is there to protect against either overload or operator error. I interpret (perhaps incorrectly) that implies that if you use a small enough battery and a non-protected starter, the battery will die before you kill the starter or at least give it a fighting chance.

    I read :

    "It is recognized the cranking current is determined by the cranking conditions such as temperature, oil viscosity, and battery state of charge. Given those same conditions, the cranking current will be approximately the same with the use of either the high CCA battery(s) or standard battery(s)."

    .. as "If you don't abuse the starter (either intentionally or mechanically) it doesn't matter what the battery is because it'll draw the same current regardless".



    This we agree on.
    My apologies mate, I was home schooling and debating dinner options when I misread or misinterpreted it.

  10. #80
    BradC is offline Super Moderator
    No one of consequence
    Supporter
    Join Date
    Mar 2018
    Location
    Perth (near Malaga)
    Posts
    3,546
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by josh.huber View Post
    My apologies mate, I was home schooling and debating dinner options when I misread or misinterpreted it.
    All good. Home schooling is enough to push anyone over the edge.

Page 8 of 11 FirstFirst ... 678910 ... LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!