Some dodgy retailers may still sell them with no vat if you search around: eg https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/281275825175
SLK, have a terrible reputation.
Some dodgy retailers may still sell them with no vat if you search around: eg https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/281275825175

Would a modern battery not also benefit from the old style test and topup routine?

You assume all batteries are the same. They're notBack in times of old, when flags were allowed to be flown, snowflakes were white stuff falling from the sky and Gen Z were nowt but a twinkle in Gen X eyes, we used to have turkey baster type testers, battery top up fluid etc.
It was part of the cars general maintenance to top up the battery electrolyte.
Now they are all supposedly sealed maintenance free (although it's usually just a sticker over the same top up bungs.
Would a modern battery not also benefit from the old style test and topup routine?

NO I don't.You assume all batteries are the same. They're not

I rest my case.Now they are all supposedly sealed maintenance free (although it's usually just a sticker over the same top up bungs.
That up as long as a whores drawers…..As long as a politician's popularity![]()
Evaporation occurs via charging not through cranking.


Nope, the electrolyte isn't most often free to slosh around as it's soaked up in a fibreglass matting, or a gelWould a modern battery not also benefit from the old style test and topup routine?
External Temperature also influences this so it may not be a universally reliable testanother good way was to listen to how the engine turned over as you tried to start it
They aren't sealed to that extent; they still have vents that regulate pressure changes. Blocking those during charging ruins the batteryif the battery is sealed, there will be no evaporation
This should always be done. So many people connect the jump leads (and potentially to the wrong place like the terminals of the dead battery, and in the wrong order) then go rev the good car and immediately start trying to crank the dead car; far more reliable to use the good car to charge the dead battery some as you describe, and one can even get away with very skinny jump leads indeed with this approach.. Have successfully used a scrap of 2.5mm T&E as jumper before now..Tried leaving the good car running 15mins to charge the dead battery, too
Alas, those batteries are probably now ruined - the longer they were like that the more capacity they've lost.. If it keeps happening and resolving the parasitic drain is on the todo list, it may be worth paying through the nose for a Li-Ion battery that will withstand the deep dischargeboth had flat batteries. I couldn't even adjust the electric seats so I could get in
Bring back the crank handleBack in times of old, when flags were allowed to be flown, snowflakes were white stuff falling from the sky and Gen Z were nowt but a twinkle in Gen X eyes, we used to have turkey baster type testers, battery top up fluid etc.
It was part of the cars general maintenance to top up the battery electrolyte.
Now they are all supposedly sealed maintenance free (although it's usually just a sticker over the same top up bungs.
Would a modern battery not also benefit from the old style test and topup routine?


That can be the case yes.Then, when it has finished cranking, the used up charge has to be put back in it, causing more evaporation.