<table border="0" width="100%" bgcolor="#FFFFC0"><tr><td>"Getting ready to move" implies having someplace to move to (not yet), and also means having the Crown in condition to be driven, so I'm turning my attention to that while the weather is holding out warm and sunny.
In the eleven years that I've owned the bus, I've never been able to keep a set of batteries alive. The bus had two new 8D truck batteries in it when I bought it, which lasted about a year. I then bought a single used-but-good-condition 8D battery, which started the engine exactly once before croaking. My friend Mark brought over two tested-good 8D batteries, which never did turn the engine over.
I'm very aware of what it takes to keep batteries from dying. I keep them disconnected when not in use, and charge them at regular intervals. Still, I always found myself digging around in my stock of deep discharge batteries from the electric car and tractor to crank the engine when I want to exercise it. A pair of Trojan T-105's will crank it right up.
Six or seven years ago a friend called me to ask if I wanted some batteries that he was charged with getting rid of by his employer. His description was confusing, so I went to look at the batteries. What he had were twenty 65 ampere-hour, high current nickle-cadmium engine starting cells that were formerly used to start the diesel generator in the basement of City Hall. Apparently, no one had bothered to put water in the cells and the generator service company that was eventually called to get the problem fixed simply disconnected the NiCd battery and installed two 8D truck batteries (suckers).
The NiCd cells had sat discharged and low on electrolyte for "a few years" as my friend put it. He simply wanted them gone. I took them and tucked them away in a corner of my yard for the next six years, still low on fluid and dead as doornails.
Last summer, I decided that these batteries either needed to be put to use or gotten rid of, so I dug them out from under a pile of leaves from the walnut tree (they were covered with plastic), cleaned them up, put distilled water in them and individually charged the cells using a multiple stage process. At the end, I had cells that appeared to have taken a charge. Load testing the cells paired up as 12 volt batteries showed that the cells retained about 60% of their first charge and delivered it to the load. Not bad, try that with lead acid cells. After a few charge-discharge cycles the batteries were delivering their rated capacity.
Apparently, what I knew that no one else did was that NiCd batteries are mostly indestructable. You can abuse them in any manner you like, discharge them, freeze them, let them sit around, everything that would destroy a regular lead-acid battery, and they just bounce back.
Now, what to do with two 12 volt battery packs? It didn't take too long to find a place for them to live:
<center>

</center>
Yesterday, I did a bit of fitting to build some plywood and 2x4 mounts to make the existing battery trays on the bus accept the NiCd cells. Connecting them up to the battery cables was a bit of an adaptation, as these cells have a 20mm stud with a threaded nut, not something that the lead clamps made for an automotive battery terminal were going to fit.
Cranking up the big Cummins 262 was no problem for this pair of old batteries. These are Alcad UHP65 cells. The UHP120's are used to start diesel locomotives! Each battery has 1850 short-circuit amperes available. Paired up in parallel, together they have 3,700 amps available!!
Tomorrow, I'm headed to the metal recycling yard to see if the 4-0 welding cable that I found there on Friday is still around and for sale. If so, I think I'm going to create some custom, ~very~ heavy duty battery cables for this setup.
</td></tr></table>