Improvisation!
Posted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 4:49 pm
I've just had to buy a new battery for Betsy Blue.
The last one was absolutely enormous, gigantically heavy, and filled the battery tray to such an extent that it was almost too big for the retaining strap's bolts.
The new one is much smaller... so much smaller that the nuts on the retaining strap's bolts reached the end of the thread before the battery was tightly secured.
Now, the obvious answer would be to chop the end of the bolts and turn another bend into the end of the foreshortened bolts: but I don't have a vice or a pair of bolt cutters.
Another answer might be to tap some additional thread onto the existing bolts: but I don't have that equipment either!
My answer was to pack out the back of the battery tray, thus bringing the battery forward into the strap. The trouble with that is it needs to be something robust, fireproof, and adjustable... so I cast my eyes around my garage, and what do I find? A box of remnant ceramic wall tiles, left over from the tiling when the house was built five years ago - the rectangular kind, rather than the square ones.
Not only are they ceramic (and fireproof), solid, and adjustable (it took four tiles to act as "spacers"!) - they are exactly the same height and width as the battery tray - it's like they were made for it!
New battery now tight and secure - and even with four ceramic tiles behind it, still a lot lighter than the old battery!
The last one was absolutely enormous, gigantically heavy, and filled the battery tray to such an extent that it was almost too big for the retaining strap's bolts.
The new one is much smaller... so much smaller that the nuts on the retaining strap's bolts reached the end of the thread before the battery was tightly secured.
Now, the obvious answer would be to chop the end of the bolts and turn another bend into the end of the foreshortened bolts: but I don't have a vice or a pair of bolt cutters.
Another answer might be to tap some additional thread onto the existing bolts: but I don't have that equipment either!
My answer was to pack out the back of the battery tray, thus bringing the battery forward into the strap. The trouble with that is it needs to be something robust, fireproof, and adjustable... so I cast my eyes around my garage, and what do I find? A box of remnant ceramic wall tiles, left over from the tiling when the house was built five years ago - the rectangular kind, rather than the square ones.
Not only are they ceramic (and fireproof), solid, and adjustable (it took four tiles to act as "spacers"!) - they are exactly the same height and width as the battery tray - it's like they were made for it!
New battery now tight and secure - and even with four ceramic tiles behind it, still a lot lighter than the old battery!