What Makes Some 12V Batteries More Dangerous Than Others?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the safety and characteristics of different 12V batteries, specifically comparing a car battery to a garage door opener battery. Participants explore the implications of voltage, current, and resistance in the context of battery performance and potential dangers associated with short circuits.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to understand why a car battery is considered more dangerous than a smaller battery despite both being rated at 12V. Questions are raised about the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance, particularly in short circuit scenarios. Participants also discuss the implications of internal resistance and the maximum power output of batteries.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the concepts, questioning assumptions about voltage and current relationships, and clarifying misunderstandings regarding Ohm's Law. Some guidance has been offered regarding the behavior of batteries under load and the effects of internal resistance, but no consensus has been reached.

Contextual Notes

There is an ongoing exploration of the definitions and implications of battery ratings, internal resistance, and the conditions under which batteries can be dangerous. Participants are navigating the complexities of electrical concepts without complete information on battery specifications.

imblum
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Hello, I am just starting to teach myself about electronics, and am already coming up with questions my text is not answering adequately. Unfortunately I don't know anyone who I could ask as I'm not in school.

Consider two 12V batteries, say a car battery and a garage door opener battery.

If you were to connect the terminals of the car battery, you could be killed, though of course if you connected the terminals of your small 12V you would not. Are they leaving a battery rating out somewhere that would tell you the big one is more dangerous? I thought both batteries were just 12V.

Considering Ohm's Law: V=IR, as resistance (R) tends to zero, current (I) will tend toward voltage (V) (right?)
Would a 12V garage door opener battery really be able to put out 12V at 12A with no load?

It also seems that the maximum power: P=IV you could get out of a 12V battery with practically zero resistance (regardless of size) would be just under 144W. Wouldn't this be a a lot for that little battery?

I feel like I'm missing some central stuff. I hope I'm not embarrassing myself by asking silly questions.

thanks,
matt
 
Last edited:
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imblum said:
If you were to connect the terminals of the car battery, you could be killed,...
Huh? Where did you get that notion?

Considering Ohm's Law: V=IR, as resistance (R) tends to zero, current (I) will tend toward voltage (V) (right?)
Also wrong. For given I, if R tends to zero, so does V. Anything multiplied by zero is zero. So V=IR=I times 0 = 0. Generally, though if you have something as large as a car battery, V will remain constant (more or less). Then V=IR can only be satisfied by I going to infinity. So if you drop a crescent wrench on the battery terminals, the current can get large enough that it will burn your hand. It won't kill you though.

Would a 12V garage door opener battery really be able to put out 12V at 12A with no load?
You only get 12A if your resistance is 1 ohm. That's the load. Somehow you seem to be ADDING rather than MULTIPLYING I and R.

It also seems that the maximum power: P=IV you could get out of a 12V battery with practically zero resistance (regardless of size) would be just under 144W. Wouldn't this be a a lot for that little battery?
Again, you get 144W if you are using a 1 ohm load. Indeed, the little battery wouldn't be able to source 12A. What will happen is that the 1 ohm load will fry the battery, bringing its output voltage to near zero. OTOH, a car battery can source 12A with ease. That's typically the amount of current needed to operate 2 headlights. And 2 headlights (in parallel) is just around 1 ohm.
 
thanks

thank you for taking my question. Let me see if I understand.

When you connect the terminals of any battery (R->0), in order to try and maintain whatever voltage, the current becomes unrestricted and tries to go to infinity (A short circuit?). This causes the voltage, and in turn the amperage to fall until the battery dies (like normal wear only faster). It just happens that the car battery can "source" enough amperage to produce the resulting wattage in the form of heat and sparks?
 
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I think there is a role of internal resistance of the battery as well.
 

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