Support for Car Talk is provided by:

Car Talk Columns

February 1999


Dear Tom and Ray:

Several months ago I was having some difficulty with my car battery. It was not [redcar.gif] holding a charge, so I had the bright idea of putting a trickle charger on it and charging it up overnight so that I could get my '84 Prelude running and drive it down to the shop for a battery check. The next morning, I started the car with charger still attached and I blew up the battery. Fourteen pounds of sodium bicarbonate later, I had the battery acid neutralized and I called a tow truck. So that I and others can avoid future pyrotechnics, can you tell us how to avoid blowing ourselves up along with our car batteries? -- Ray

Tom: Yes. The best way to avoid blowing yourself up is by calling AAA and letting them risk blowing themselves up trying to start your car. That's worth 40 bucks a year, isn't it?

Ray: In your case, Ray, I'd have to guess that your battery was out-gassing. It probably over-charged on the trickle charger, which caused it to produce hydrogen, and when you started it the next morning, something created a spark, and recreated the Hindenburg disaster in your driveway.

Tom: If I had to guess, I'd say the spark was probably caused by a loose connection at the battery terminal, which may have also caused your original battery problem.

Ray: Just be glad you were in the car, rather than standing in front of the battery.

Tom: In general, batteries explode because of the convergence of hydrogen and sparks. So you want to do everything you can to avoid both of those.

Ray: Hydrogen is harder to avoid, because you can't see it, smell it or hear it. My brother likes to detect it by lighting a large Havana cigar, but that, in part, explains the unusual appearance of his facial features.

Tom: Batteries that have been overcharged are the most likely to emit hydrogen, but because batteries that are faulty in other ways can also outgas, you have to assume that there is hydrogen in the area of your battery. That's the safest thing to do.

Ray: That's why you concentrate on preventing sparks. You do that by being careful with the jumper cables. Don't let them dangle around and bounce into each other or bounce off parts of the engine while you're hooking them up. Connect them carefully, in the order prescribed by the instructions.

Tom: And the instructions on almost every set of jumper cables we've ever seen, tell you not to make the final connection to a battery terminal. Since that's the last connection -- completing the circuit -- you increase the chance of a spark jumping from the jumper cable end to the terminal. So instead, make the final connection to a grounded, solid metal piece of the engine -- away from the battery.

Ray: And another precaution is to stay away from the battery when you're actually starting the car. After hooking up the jumper cables, most people stand around and watch the engine to see if it starts. This is dumb. You'll hear it start. Trust me. You're safer inside your car.

Tom: Of course, you're safer still if you're watching AAA do the whole thing from your living room window while politely asking them, "You guys done yet?" © 1999 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


What is the most cost-effective way to buy a car? Tom and Ray hash it all out in their pamphlet "Should I Buy, Lease, or Steal My Next Car?" To order, send (check or money order) to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. You can also order online.


© 1999 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Back to the February 1999 index


[Latest | Previous | Next | Random | Search | Browse | ]

Back to Car Talk Columns

Search Car Talk
GO
What Google thinks of Car Talk; the all-time most confounding puzzler?
Meet Car Talk's latest winner — one of the few, the proud, the recently-bathed mechanics.
In the Car Talk Look-A-Like Contest. Ready to take a peek?
What's in your trunk? Here are Tom and Ray's suggestions.
Watch this week's episodes from our new animated TV series, and find local listings.
What happens when you donate your car? Well....