I need a battery charger which I can leave next to the bike connected to its battery so it can get an occasional boost. I don't have an AC domestic power supply where I keep my bike.
Was thinking on the lines of those booster/jump start units which you charge up at home and then carry it out to the vehicle but in my case the booster pack will need an automatic shut off for when the bike battery becomes fully charged.
Something which also switches over to maintenance/trickle charge once the bike battery has reached full charge, would be perfect.
I did start emailing various suppliers but got a lot of 'we only sell the products and know nothing about what our products actually do' kind of caper.
Sure I've removed the battery from the bike and charged it in doors but this involves interfering with the battery leads too often and is just generally an awkward thing to be doing in winter when I just want to be riding the thing.
What I'm looking for might not actually exist but hopefully some of you knowledgeable people can help?
The road to success is always under construction.....
Happiness is finding you have another gear left....
If there's no solution then its not a problem.
I think oxford products do a solar powered charger. Whether its any good I dont know or if it would suit your needs.
As long as your battery is in good condition then simply riding it is good enough to keep the battery power up.
Probably been well over 2 years since i last gave my battery a small boost.
It will obviously have more chance of being affected by extremely cold weather if left out in the elements though.
I would've thought most battery chargers either switch off or trickle charge past 80% these days.
I know all the ones i use at work do.
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
(07-10-14, 12:04 PM)darrsi link Wrote: .......your battery.....will obviously have more chance of being affected by extremely cold weather if left out in the elements though.
darrsi - this is just it ie it can deteriorate whilst being left out in the elements. So I want to kybosh that by giving it a boost. But I don't have an AC power supply.
[quote author=Arbie link=topic=14947.msg169251#msg169251 date=1412660246]
I think oxford products do a solar powered charger. Whether its any good I dont know or if it would suit your needs.
Yup - the solar power debate. I believe these items only gives a maintenance charge whilst only boosting up the power very slowly and of course not at night.
Does anyone know if those 'car - jump start booster packs' would be safe to connect to a motorcycle battery for a couple of hours or will that overload the bikes battery and the bikes internal wiring/electrics?
The road to success is always under construction.....
Happiness is finding you have another gear left....
If there's no solution then its not a problem.
Messed up the 'quoting previous messages'. :\ So scrub my last post. Have tried again here:
(07-10-14, 06:37 AM)Arbie link Wrote: I think oxford products do a solar powered charger.
I believe these items only give a maintenance charge whilst only boosting up the power very slowly. And of course not at night.
(07-10-14, 12:04 PM)darrsi link Wrote: ......your battery.....will obviously have more chance of being affected by extremely cold weather if left out in the elements though.
This is just it, ie it can deteriorate whilst being left out in the elements. So I want to kybosh that by giving it a boost but I don't have an AC power supply.
Does anyone know if those 'car jump start booster packs' would be safe to connect to a motorcycle for a couple of hours or would this damage/overload the bikes battery/internal wiring/electrics?
The road to success is always under construction.....
Happiness is finding you have another gear left....
If there's no solution then its not a problem.
You don't really want to start blasting power into a small rechargeable battery if you want to charge it on a regular basis, it can affect the lifespan.
As i said before if your battery is in good nick, it shouldn't really need boosting as long as the bike is being ridden every week.
If it's not being ridden, over winter for instance, then just remove it, otherwise why not invest in a battery, it sounds like you may need a new one anyway?
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
07-10-14, 09:38 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-10-14, 10:25 PM by mobile mouse.)
Hi,
I think what your looking fore is this:
Antigravity Micro Start XP-1
You can google it for yourself, it's brought in from the US, it's available on ebay look for the UK supplier.
(07-10-14, 09:38 PM)mobile mouse link Wrote: Hi,
I think what your looking fore is this:
Antigravity Micro Start XP-1
You can google it for yourself, it's brought in from the US, it's available on ebay look for the UK supplier.
Does look like a handy, albeit expensive bit of kit.
The thing is if you keep running a battery flat in very cold weather it'll eventually peg out on you anyway.
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.