El Fuego ( the grounded one ) wrote:Glue a penny in the middle of the battery directly in the middle between the two terminal, that will eleminate your battery acid problem.I think you're talking about galvanic corrosion (two different metals connected by an electrolyte) And the addition of the penny is a form of cathodic protection. The penny does help reduce corrosion of the battery posts and terminals by becoming a donor metal (zinc and magnesium work even better), but it doesn't neutralize the acid.
The battery acid is attracted to copper and will eventualy turn the penny green and eat it away, effectively keeping acid away from damaging everything else. When the penny is small and almost gone, peel it up and replace with another penny.
This is an old 1950's hodrod trick, still works today.
Labotomi wrote:El Fuego ( the grounded one ) wrote:Glue a penny in the middle of the battery directly in the middle between the two terminal, that will eleminate your battery acid problem.I think you're talking about galvanic corrosion (two different metals connected by an electrolyte) And the addition of the penny is a form of cathodic protection. The penny does help reduce corrosion of the battery posts and terminals by becoming a donor metal (zinc and magnesium work even better), but it doesn't neutralize the acid.
The battery acid is attracted to copper and will eventualy turn the penny green and eat it away, effectively keeping acid away from damaging everything else. When the penny is small and almost gone, peel it up and replace with another penny.
This is an old 1950's hodrod trick, still works today.
Read about cathodic protection
Try and keep the battery acid inside the battery.
Roscoe wrote:Labotomi wrote:El Fuego ( the grounded one ) wrote:Glue a penny in the middle of the battery directly in the middle between the two terminal, that will eleminate your battery acid problem.I think you're talking about galvanic corrosion (two different metals connected by an electrolyte) And the addition of the penny is a form of cathodic protection. The penny does help reduce corrosion of the battery posts and terminals by becoming a donor metal (zinc and magnesium work even better), but it doesn't neutralize the acid.
The battery acid is attracted to copper and will eventualy turn the penny green and eat it away, effectively keeping acid away from damaging everything else. When the penny is small and almost gone, peel it up and replace with another penny.
This is an old 1950's hodrod trick, still works today.
Read about cathodic protection
Try and keep the battery acid inside the battery.
You just repeated what he told us...