> Do you see AGM anywhere on the case ? Look it up . Its a sealed Lead Acid Battery excessively sulphated and boiled dry.
> Check before you rant
No rant, just the truth. It is an agm. Charge it right, and you won't sulfate or boil dry, but merely use it until it's normal rated end of life.
> The example is meant to illustrate what happens when people covercharge such batteries .
The solution is to stop doing that. Kind of like the joke about the doctor telling the guy who complains that it hurts when he pees to simply stop doing that.
> That said Remco is a chinese company making a lot of AGM batteries ,in fact most of their range . This one is however not AGM.
Sorry but it is. The specs on the case identify it, without having to specifically spell it out. It is not a gel either. See the white absorbed glass matt between the closely spaced plates? That isn't sulfate, but the mat itself. Kind of shiny though now that you've oversaturated it with water.
> AGM is sulphuric acid impregnated into glass matting to hold it between the plates. It still boils off during overcharge and adding water and a little acid will not harm them further .
> The matting and paste absorbe some of the electrolyte again and often start working again but the sulphation has caused irrepairable damage.
Stop overcharging them. Stop undercharging them. And at this point, cutting the tops off and refilling is NOT what it is designed to do, so stop playing with trash, get a new one, and treat it properly.
The lingo used is to bring a bit of humor to YOUR rant about sealed vrla batteries, countering it by a bit of education on just treating them right, as the specs on most of the casings clearly show.
In the end, I think you are confusing the so-called "maintenance free" sealed FLOODED batteries, with those of an agm. In that case of a sealed MF battery you have 3 choices:
1) Don't buy it in the first place.
2) Wait for the warranty to expire, pop the tops, and refill with distilled water as needed.
3) IMMEDIATELY void the warranty, pop the top, and refill with distilled water as needed.
But don't do this to an agm since it is not worth the trouble. Start over fresh and simply just treat them as designed.
> Check before you rant
No rant, just the truth. It is an agm. Charge it right, and you won't sulfate or boil dry, but merely use it until it's normal rated end of life.
> The example is meant to illustrate what happens when people covercharge such batteries .
The solution is to stop doing that. Kind of like the joke about the doctor telling the guy who complains that it hurts when he pees to simply stop doing that.
> That said Remco is a chinese company making a lot of AGM batteries ,in fact most of their range . This one is however not AGM.
Sorry but it is. The specs on the case identify it, without having to specifically spell it out. It is not a gel either. See the white absorbed glass matt between the closely spaced plates? That isn't sulfate, but the mat itself. Kind of shiny though now that you've oversaturated it with water.

> AGM is sulphuric acid impregnated into glass matting to hold it between the plates. It still boils off during overcharge and adding water and a little acid will not harm them further .
> The matting and paste absorbe some of the electrolyte again and often start working again but the sulphation has caused irrepairable damage.
Stop overcharging them. Stop undercharging them. And at this point, cutting the tops off and refilling is NOT what it is designed to do, so stop playing with trash, get a new one, and treat it properly.
The lingo used is to bring a bit of humor to YOUR rant about sealed vrla batteries, countering it by a bit of education on just treating them right, as the specs on most of the casings clearly show.
In the end, I think you are confusing the so-called "maintenance free" sealed FLOODED batteries, with those of an agm. In that case of a sealed MF battery you have 3 choices:
1) Don't buy it in the first place.
2) Wait for the warranty to expire, pop the tops, and refill with distilled water as needed.
3) IMMEDIATELY void the warranty, pop the top, and refill with distilled water as needed.
But don't do this to an agm since it is not worth the trouble. Start over fresh and simply just treat them as designed.
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