Re: Dry dead battery
- From: "Tom Biasi" <tombiasi***@optonline.net>
- Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2008 18:53:48 -0400
"George Jetson" <GeorgeJetson@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:HDuak.15996$Ri.13241@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Jonathan Kirwan" <jkirwan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1cui64tp3blo98q3cuekdkbq8mqm64sgnv@xxxxxxxxxx
On Mon, 30 Jun 2008 17:06:09 -0700 (PDT), rabiticide
<rabiticide@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
It's my motorcycle battery and it's the situation where I need it to
get to this job so I can afford to fix it. I just came off disability
and with $4 to my name I spent $2 on a gallon of distilled water...
Okay. It sounded like that kind of situation. I've been there in my
life, too, so I can feel your pain.
So I am going to try it and see what happens. I will post my
results....
If there doesn't appear to be _any_ sulfuric acid inside, then I don't
hold out much hope here. But best luck, anyway.
Isn't H2SO4 a solid? I don't know - I'm thinking of, like, NaOH which
dissolves in water to make the base.
<snip>
NaOH is a solid. White, and kind of slippery to the touch. But
sulfuric acid is a liquid. I've used it, before, as part of a double
boiler situation that could achieve the higher melting points I needed
at the time while also providing very, very even heating which was
also necessary for the rocket fuel I was making then.
Jon
Depending on local weather conditions, rain water should woek as well.
--
They can have my command prompt when they pry it from my cold dead
fingers.
Rain water is not clean. It has a nucleus of something and collects crap on
the way down.
Tom
.
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- From: Jonathan Kirwan
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- Re: Dry dead battery
- From: Jonathan Kirwan
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