A starting and lighting battery consists of the following
principal parts
Plates
Separators
Electrolyte
Jars
Covers
Cell
Connectors and Terminals
Case
Plate
Casting the Grid. The grid is the skeleton of the plate. It
performs the double function of supporting the mechanically weak active
material and of conducting the current. It is made of a lead antimony alloy
which is melted and poured into a mould. Pure lead is too soft and too easily
attacked by the electrolyte, and antimony is added to give stiffness, and
resistance to the action of the electrolyte in the cell. The amount of antimony
used varies in different makes but probably averages 8 to 10%.
Trimming the Grids. When the castings have cooled, they are
removed from the moulds and passed to a press or trimming machine which trims
off the casting gate and the rough edges. The grids are given a rigid
inspection, those having shrunken or missing ribs or other defects being
rejected. The grids are now ready for pasting.
Pastes. There are
many formulas for the pastes, which are later converted into active material,
and each is considered a trade secret by the manufacturer using it. The basis of
all, however, is oxide of lead, either Red Lead (Pb304), Litharge (PbO), or a
mixture of the two, made into a paste with a liquid, such as dilute sulphuric
acid. The object of mixing the oxides with the liquid is to form a paste of the
proper consistency for application to the grids, and at the same time introduce
the proper amount of binding, or setting agent which will give porosity, and
which will bind together the active material, especially in the positive plate.
Red lead usually predominates in the positive paste, and litharge in the
negative, as this combination requires the least energy in forming the oxides
to active material.
Applying the Paste.
After the oxides are mixed to a paste they are applied to the grids.
Drying the Paste. The freshly pasted plates are now allowed
to dry in the air, or are dried by blowing air over them.
Forming. The next step is to change the paste of oxides into
the active materials which make a cell operative. This is called
"forming" and is really nothing but a prolonged charge, requiring
several days. The passing of the current slowly changes the mixtures of lead
oxide and lead sulphate, forming brown peroxide of lead (PbO2), on the positive
plate and gray spongy metallic lead on the negative.
Separators
In batteries used
both for starting and for lighting, separators made of specially treated wood
are largely used. In batteries used for
lighting or ignition, sheets of rubber in which numerous holes have been
drilled are also used.
Electrolyte
Little need be said
here about the electrolyte, since a full description is given elsewhere. See
page 222. Acid is received by the battery manufacturer in concentrated form.
Its specific gravity is then 1.835. The acid commonly used is made by the
"contact" process, in which sulphur dioxide is oxidized to sulphur
trioxide, and then, with the addition of water, changed to sulphuric acid. The
concentrated acid is diluted with distilled water to the proper specific
gravity.
Jars
The jars which contain the plates, separators, and
electrolyte are made of a tough, hard rubber compound. They are made either by
the moulding process, or by -wrapping sheets of rubber compound around metal
mandrels. In either case the jar is subsequently vulcanized by careful heating
at the correct temperature. The battery manufacturers do not, as a rule, make
their own jars, but have them made by the rubber companies who give the jars a
high voltage test to detect any flaws, holes, or cracks which would subsequently
cause a leak. The jars as received at the battery maker's factory are ready for
use.
Across the bottom of the jar are several stiff ribs which
extend up into the jar so as to provide a substantial support for the plates,
and at the same time form several pockets below the plates in which the
sediment resulting from shedding of active material from the plates
accumulates.
Covers
Single and Double
Covers. Modern types of batteries have a single piece cover, the edges of which
are made so as to form a slot or channel with the inside of the jar, into which
is poured sealing compound to form a leak proof joint.
Sealing Around the Posts. Much variety is shown in the
methods used to secure a leak proof joint between the posts and the cover. Several
methods are used. One of these uses the sealing compound to make a tight joint.
Using Sealing Compound. Some of the batteries which use sealing compound to
make a tight joint between the cover and the post have a hard rubber bushing
shrunk over the post.
Case
The wooden case in which the cells are placed is usually
made of kiln dried white oak or hard maple. Assembling and Sealing
The first step in assembling a battery is to burn the
positive and negative plates to their respective straps, Fig. 5, forming the
positive and negative "groups,"

We had to have our car battery recharged and I did not know till then that there are two batteries. Very interesting.
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