George,
Most of the motorcycles will still show at least 11 volts while
cranking and those are small batteries. They will jump back up to at least
12.5 after cranking. I agree that 9.5 volts is almost totally dead for
practical purposes. Most battery based systems will have trouble at around 10
volts. Use a backup battery and a changeover system with any electrically
based system. The EXP Buss (I think) is sold by the anywhere map people. Makes
it very easy to set up a battery backup system and still charge both. I think
Eggenfellner also sells them. Good looking product, a good friend has one.
For battery info go to the Yuasa web site. In the technical
section they have a excellent do's and don'ts of battery operation. There is
also a good description of the different battery types and their discharge
rates. Good info to know about this VITAL system part!
Bill Jepson
In a message dated 2/15/2005 11:34:28 PM Pacific Standard Time,
lendich@optusnet.com.au writes:
Bill,
What would you expect the battery to show under starting
load.
George ( down under)
>
> > I suspected a
charging system failure immediately and checked the
> >battery
voltage in the SDS monitor. This read 9.5 volts so I knew
then
that
> >we had a charging system failure. At the time, I
was not worried about
> >making it to an airport, assuming that the
alternator had failed just in
the
> >last few minutes and
believing that I had 20-25 minutes of battery power
> >remaining.
In fact, it is likely that the alternator failed soon after
>
>takeoff from Springbank but I did not notice signs of the failure
until
the
> >battery was well over half
dead.