Recently worked on a semi where the driver reported 1-2 of the batteries emitting steam. Immediately my first thought was an overcharging issue. For those who are unfamiliar, most semi trucks use 4 12volt batteries wired in parallel to provide 12volts and a whole lot of amperage.
I put a meter on the batteries once disconnected and found 3 were at 13.9 volts, and one was 9.6 volts. Foolishly I didn’t check the alternator with the old batteries in place but once I changed the batteries, the charging voltage was at 14.2v—right in line with manufacturer specifications. So it seems like a cell in the 9.6v battery went bad and once it was no longer able to accept 12.6volts, the extra juice ended up going to the good batteries, causing them to overcharge.
Can someone help me understand exactly what is going on at an electrical level here? If the alternator provides the voltage & current to charge all 4 batteries to ~12.6volts under normal conditions, why does one battery failing cause the other batteries to charge to a higher voltage than normal? Does the voltage regulator in the alternator “sense” the low voltage in the bad battery and drive the alternator to deliver more voltage than normal?
I put a meter on the batteries once disconnected and found 3 were at 13.9 volts, and one was 9.6 volts. Foolishly I didn’t check the alternator with the old batteries in place but once I changed the batteries, the charging voltage was at 14.2v—right in line with manufacturer specifications. So it seems like a cell in the 9.6v battery went bad and once it was no longer able to accept 12.6volts, the extra juice ended up going to the good batteries, causing them to overcharge.
Can someone help me understand exactly what is going on at an electrical level here? If the alternator provides the voltage & current to charge all 4 batteries to ~12.6volts under normal conditions, why does one battery failing cause the other batteries to charge to a higher voltage than normal? Does the voltage regulator in the alternator “sense” the low voltage in the bad battery and drive the alternator to deliver more voltage than normal?
