Re: Battery Question
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Home away from home
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Dear Paul:
I think what you want is the Group 2E battery it's 19 7/16 long 4 1/8 wide and 9 1/8 high. Just tell them you want a 2E 6 volt tractor battery
Posted on: 2013/3/25 19:40
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Re: Battery Question
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Forum Ambassador
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Paul,
I understand that Optima batteries, if severely discharged, can still be "brought back to life". This YouTube video may be of assistance.
Posted on: 2013/3/25 19:51
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Mal
/o[]o\ ==== Bowral, Southern Highlands of NSW, Australia "Out of chaos comes order" - Nietzsche. 1938 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD 1941 One-Twenty Club Coupe - SOLD 1948 Super Eight Limo, chassis RHD - SOLD 1950 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD What's this? Put your Packard in the Packard Vehicle Registry! Here's how! Any questions - PM or email me at ozstatman@gmail.com |
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Re: Battery Question
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Home away from home
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Try the Tractor Supply or NAPA store near you.
(o{}o)
Posted on: 2013/3/25 21:44
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We move toward
And make happen What occupies our mind... (W. Scherer) |
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Re: Battery Question
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Forum Ambassador
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NAPA still stocks the 6-volt 2E lead/acid battery and that's what most folks I know with Clipper-body cars use. They give excellent life - usually about 6 years.
Posted on: 2013/3/25 22:11
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Re: Battery Question
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Home away from home
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Deacon Weeks. If you got good service from an Optima, why not buy another? That's all everyone in my circle use, Cords, 54-year-old Ferraris among them. The Optima in my '47 Super is eight (8) years old and as good as new. 800 cold cranking amps. Weighs only 12 or so lbs. vs. 56 lbs. for the 800 cold cranking amp heavy duty 3EH i once used, or 38-40 for the standard EE (if memory serves) wet cell. No off-gassing, no terminal corrosion. Weight's the enemy in any car.
Some might have a fetish for original batteries. I don't. I'm strictly interested in the car. Batteries, tires, fan belts, motor oil weren't made by Packard. You couldn't pay me to use one of those heavy wet cell batteries again. Packards are nose heavy enough as 'tis. If you're concerned about "keeping up appearances," there are plastic cases styled like traditional wet batteries into which you can slip the Optima. But if you skip this artifice, you can use the rest of your long battery tray as a convenient place to put tools, etc. when you're working in the engine bay. G'luck.
Posted on: 2013/3/26 14:22
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Re: Battery Question
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Home away from home
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I use the Optima 1000CCA 6 volt in my 1954 Cavalier.
As I recall it cost me about $90 at batteries plus. Cranks good and fast. Stays nice and clean with no leakage. You could get two of these on the shelf, I have a small 12 volt for my add-on AC sitting next. I had considered strapping two in parallel if I ever removed the 12 volt. Jim
Posted on: 2013/3/26 19:31
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Re: Battery Question
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Home away from home
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Man, now I have to think about all this! I was just planning to motor over to the nearby Tractor Supply and buy a new battery. For whatever reason, I thought my Optima cost like $285 or so???!!! If Optimas are available for $90, then I'd probably go that way again.
I bought a Battery Tender for the old Optima, you guys think that was what killed it??? Should I not do that with the new battery?? Just askin'???
Posted on: 2013/3/26 20:54
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Re: Battery Question
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Home away from home
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I know that there are people on here that love them, but I think that battery tenders are a money making farce. Every winter my collection sits 2-3 months while I am away. Every spring I just get in, turn the key and start them. If I had a car with a functioning clock I would pull a battery cable for storage longer than a month. Being a cheapskate, I usually buy the cheapest batteries I can find and most last 5-6 years. A tender might be a good idea for a seldom-used car with a computer that constantly draws.
Optimas do hate to be overcharged--saw a tractor with a bad regulator ruin one in an afternoon. Otherwise, they are amazing.
Posted on: 2013/3/27 5:37
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Re: Battery Question
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Just can't stay away
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For what it's worth, I bought a NAPA battery (model BAT 7205) 2 years ago for my 50 Super. Your car would take the same one. Its dimensions match the original exactly, so no issues fitting it in the tray and the holddown. I think it cost around $140. See here:
napaonline.com/Catalog/CatalogItemDetail.aspx?R=NBE7205_0398998961 It weighs 40 lbs and has operated perfectly for me. And I've never fussed with a battery tender (in Michigan, my car hibernates in the garage for ~ 4-5 months every winter)...and I even keep the battery cables (size 00) attached.
Posted on: 2013/3/27 9:21
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