Is Adding Repair Fluid to Dry Batteries Actually Useful?
1 Answers
Adding repair fluid to dry batteries is not useful. Reasons why adding repair fluid is ineffective: Since maintenance-free batteries use lead-calcium alloy grids, they produce minimal water decomposition during charging and have low water evaporation rates. Additionally, their sealed casing design releases very little sulfuric acid gas. Compared to traditional batteries, maintenance-free batteries offer advantages such as no need to add any liquid, minimal corrosion on terminal posts and wires, strong resistance to overcharging, high starting current, and long charge retention. Dry Batteries: Dry batteries are actually called "maintenance-free batteries." Maintenance-free batteries feature a fully sealed structure and require no maintenance under normal usage, offering excellent performance characteristics such as high efficiency, long lifespan, no pollution, maintenance-free operation, and safety reliability. Due to their structural advantages, maintenance-free batteries consume very little electrolyte and generally have twice the lifespan of conventional batteries.