![[Previous Item]](./MFBatteries_files/image001.jpg)
MF Batteries, as used on Motorcycles, ATVs &
Jet-Skis.
A Short History of Battery Technology & The New “WET” Sealed MF
Batteries
- Over
the past decade more & more motorcycles have been delivered with
sealed so-called “MF” (Maintenance-Free) batteries instead of the
previously common filler-cap type. These “MF” batteries were pioneered by
Yuasa Battery Japan & first introduced on some Honda motorcycles in
the mid-80’s. Their advantages over the filler cap type are mainly their
more compact size for a given cranking power & their anti-vibration
glass-wool supportive plate separators. These fully absorb and hold the
free acid electrolyte by capillary attraction thereby allowing the battery
to be mounted even in an inclined position for a lower riding seat
height. Sometimes, especially in
their early days, these MF batteries also brought some disadvantages,
warranty claims resulting from errors in battery commissioning by dealers,
in turn compounded by their lack of both technical knowledge about MF battery
technology & the appropriate chargers for them.
- Commissioning
errors are aggravated by the fact that these batteries are delivered
dry-charged with their own individual special acid cellular pack, the acid
being of a higher concentration & density than standard battery acid.
This acid has to be allowed to trickle from it’s special pack into the
battery slowly, to avoid trapping bubbles, then the battery has to stand
while the acid is fully absorbed before being given a pre-delivery 30
minute charge. All of this takes a good hour, an irritating delay both for
the impatient customer & the dealer trying to satisfy him while also
attending to other things. The inevitable tendency is to short-cut the
correct procedures & this results in an under-par battery performance
& an early warranty claim, usually at the expense of the motorcycle
importer or distributor. Field
studies by motorcycle manufacturers have shown that around half of all MF
battery warranty claims arise from errors in commissioning procedure.
- In
the early days, even greater problems arose as a result of a lack of
suitable chargers for MF batteries whose battery voltage when fully
charged is somewhat higher than that of a fully charged filler cap type.
This is because of their more acidic electrolyte & differences in
plate design. Moreover, although
MF batteries (of the “YTX” type for example) retain their voltage
significantly better during storage than filler cap types, once they do
fall into deep-discharge (sulphation) they are if anything the more
reluctant to accept a charge again. In fact, with their higher voltage
characteristics, it happens often that an MF battery just cannot be
recharged with a conventional type charger (with constant voltage charge
characteristic). This fact gave
rise to many MF battery warranty costs until a then obscure Belgian
company developed (in the first place for Honda Europe) a completely new
type of combination testing & constant current charging device with,
moreover, the ability to recover many even sulphated batteries to a
serviceable status called the BatteryMate. Today the BatteryMate is the
most widely endorsed and used professional diagnostic battery charger in
motorcycle workshops in Europe & North America. TecMate followed up the BatteryMate
with OptiMate, a specially designed end-user charger to prevent
deep-discharge occurring in the first place. The OptiMate PRO 4MF followed, a fully automatic 4-station
multiple battery diagnostic charger, whose application aim is to reduce MF
battery commissioning errors while also eliminating the pressure on the
dealer & the stress which causes the errors.
- Learning
from past warranty experience & realising that commissioning errors
lay behind many claims, motorcycle manufacturers also deliver pre-filled
sealed batteries. The acid is put into these batteries at the battery
factory; the battery is sealed, charged and then delivered. The chore of filling the battery is
removed from the dealer. Moreover, tests show that these new batteries
retain their charge better & for longer than the previous dry-charged
MF batteries (those delivered with separate acid packs). Even after 24
months of storage & having lost a good part of their charge, tests
done on the new “YTZ” (Yuasa) & “FTZ” (Furukawa) type “wet” sealed
batteries show that the battery can be restored to 90% of it’s original
electrical capacity by the BatteryMate, a much better percentage capacity
restoration than achievable after a similar period of self-discharge of
the dry-charged “YTX” series.
However, a correct commissioning charge is still vital for these
batteries.
- A
number of different models of these new YTZ / FTZ series batteries have
been introduced, from the YTZ7S (6Ah) up to a YTZ14S (12Ah). Besides their
slower self-discharge & improved restorability characteristics, the
YTZ / FTZ series batteries are also volumetrically more compact than the
YTX series batteries due to a reduced air chamber height (air space above
the plates). Battery service life
is generally claimed to be equal to that of the YTX series.
- Harleys
& Buells will also be equipped with a newly developed “wet” sealed
battery. This battery was developed especially for Harley-Davidson by EPM
in the U.S.A. The word is that these new batteries are a big improvement
on the various Harley batteries delivered in previous seasons, in several
respects, including charge retention in storage & resistance to
vibbbrrration. The part numbers of Harley’s new batteries are #65989-97A
(18Ah, fitted to Buells & the lighter Harleys) & #66010-97A (28Ah,
for the cruisers & tourers).
- Although
these various new batteries have slower self-discharge in storage &
improved restorability, the self-discharge clock starts to tick
considerably earlier in practice for a battery commissioned & charged
at the factory than for a dry-charged battery commissioned & charged
by the dealer. It is therefore vital that dealers give these new batteries
a pre-delivery charge on a suitable charger before delivery to the end
user to avoid potential problems later. The BatteryMate has been tested in
Japan & found to be very suitable for the new YTZ batteries. TecMate expect increased demand for
their automatic OptiMate PRO 4 diagnostic multiple charger arising from
the essential pre-delivery recharging of the new batteries.
- “Wet”
MF or “AGM” (Absorbent Glass Mat separator) batteries are also referred to
in some technical bulletins & documents as
“ Valve-regulated “. The
GT12B-4 batteries fitted to Yamaha’s R1, Yuasa’s YT7B-4, Fiamm’s FGH21803,
18Ah lawn tractor battery & Hawker Energy’s “Genesis” G13EP, G16EP
& G26EP batteries are all also “ WET “ MF valve-regulated
batteries. However they do NOT all share similar charging voltage
characteristics.
·
In addition to the
BatteryMate & OptiMate Pro-4 commissioning chargers, all these batteries
can be excellently charged with the automatic constant current chargers
AccuMate, AccuMate Pro, OptiMate & OptiMate PRO 8.