I think I may have accidentally figured something out about cells of all kinds. It seems that giving a cell a load and/or short will keep it from corroding as easy as just doing nothing. I figured this out and I'm redoing the test with more control over it as I was not looking for this from the test i was doing. I was trying to see if a magnet touching steel wire would stop the corrosion of in salt water while shorted out. I had one cup with salt water and copper and steel wire and another cup the same but the steel wire was touching a magnet but the magnet was not in the water. Both cells were shorted out for almost a week but I noticed very little corrosion forming on them both and declared the experiment a failure so I removed the shorts and left both metals in the water solution and figured i'll clean it up later. Two days went by and both metals are showing red rust badly and are corroding away like crazy. I'm re-running the test again but one cell is shorted and the other is not to make sure this is not some fluke.
A short keeping a cell alive would explain why the crystal glue cell that I shorted out for a 3 months was still alive when given a chance to rest. It would also explain why some cells shorted out come back stronger. It may become important to place a high ohm resistor across the cells to keep them in tip-top shape. This would also explain why 12 volt batteries go dead when never used.
A short keeping a cell alive would explain why the crystal glue cell that I shorted out for a 3 months was still alive when given a chance to rest. It would also explain why some cells shorted out come back stronger. It may become important to place a high ohm resistor across the cells to keep them in tip-top shape. This would also explain why 12 volt batteries go dead when never used.
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