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This is what I like with Lidi charger, it does actually turn off once fully charged, and if it turns back on again it only turns on at 0.8 amp which even with shorted cell is unlikely to cause damage. The Ctek MXS 3.8 however will return to 3.8 amp, and the float charger for caravan can bang out 25 amp, I walked past the caravan and did not click on the smell, I looked at local drains first, and I should have known better, the battery was well and truly cooked.Me too, it is a lot of potential heat that 12amps can generate in a battery with a shorted cell. If I intended leaving it charging unattended for any length of time, then I would want to make sure the charge current fell to a very low safe value first.
20 years ago I designed and built myself an up to 12v 60amp pulse charger. It's output was only (battery) voltage controlled. I never left that unattended when it was in use, I built it mostly for emergency starting a car with a flat battery - ten minutes charging a flat battery, then you would be able to start the car.
Yesterday evening, with a bit of time to kill - I went searching for information on maintaining such batteries. Varta's battery site seems to be offering some sensible reading, without getting too technical. It agrees with me that batteries should never be left on a permanent charge. It says that recharge requires 1.25 times the amp/hour of the amp/discharge - so if you discharge a battery by 10amp/hour, it will need 10x1.25 = 12.5amp/hour to replace that discharge.
Clearly with shorted cell battery is US anyway, however there is an explosion risk, and risk of damaging the charger, in a boat/caravan/car when in use not really a problem you should as I did smell there is something wrong, but unless you have a hydrogen sulphide detector, only way with unattended battery is very low charge rate.
With the mobility scooter one battery had a shorted cell which in turn killed the other battery, it was left on charge in my father-in-laws garage, and there was no one who would smell if anything went wrong.
I wonder how long those replacement batteries had been in stock before I bought them, got them direct from manufacturer so would hope not long, but clearly were not fully charged and even now 9 watt seems a lot for two AGM batteries if fully charged so maybe still not charged. Although 9 watt = 375 mA so not really much of a charge.
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