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11 answers

The best way to keep corrosion off your battery terminals is to crazy-glue a penny to your battery 3/4inch away from the positive terminal. The corrosion will build on the copper penny rather than the terminal. Every now and again, pop the penny off and glue on another one. You will NEVER have to clean your battery terminals again

2006-07-01 04:18:22 · answer #1 · answered by the_wanderer 1 · 0 0

forget those little felt thingies, you need a barrier that keeps air off the terminals. Air is the enemy. Clean them as someone before me mentioned, apply a gun type or wheel bearing grease to not only the post, but to the entire cable end. Air is the enemy. they also make a special product that you can buy in a spray can. but why buy that when you use less than a penny worth of grease. Another way to go is buy gold battery cable ends, and go to a dry cell battery. The cable ends are only about $25 each and a good dry cell is a little less or around $200. If you do that, chuck the dime-store cables and invest in some good ones.

2006-06-25 12:33:52 · answer #2 · answered by yenkoman1969 3 · 0 0

Here's the correct answer...don't use a hillbilly fix like soda pop/coke...it works, but you'll end up with a sticky mess on the battery. Here's a better cleaner- use a combination of water and baking soda...it will boil off the acid buildup just as well and can be rinsed off with clear water after that. It rinses clean with no sticky residue. After the terminal is clean, use a fine wire brush to scuff it a little so it will make good contact. Get the little felt anti-corrosion pads (available at any auto store or dept. store's auto department) and put them on before reinstalling the battery wires. They are treated with a corrosion inhibitor. That should fix the problem.

Hope this helped.

2006-06-24 05:00:31 · answer #3 · answered by answerman63 5 · 1 0

Go to Advance Auto Parts store, or Wal Mart-buy these battery post protectors. They are made of a treated felt like material that fit over the posts - under the connectors. (green and red in color). Use Coke or Pepsi to clean the posts, then rinse with water. DON'T get the runoff on your clothing or car finish, it will ruin clothing.

2006-06-24 04:54:07 · answer #4 · answered by DonFly 1 · 0 0

The way to keep posts from corroding is to lubricrate them by using some type of grease like wheel bearing grease.

2006-06-24 06:38:05 · answer #5 · answered by theskipps 1 · 0 0

many cases the corrosion is brought about through the evaporation of the battery acid- for the time of operating and charging there is a few evaporation that takes position. If there's a putting out difficulty, that's regularly indicative of an unclean floor that's being bolted to- both the wries were no longer sparkling or the terminals on the battery were no longer scraped. After using a wire brush to verify that issues are bright sparkling, and putting each bolt to its perfect tightness, use spray grease, spray paint, or "intense tack" spray to inhibit destiny corrosion- they are going to each and each deter the acid that receives on the metallic to create extra corrosion.

2016-11-15 05:05:44 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can pick up the caps from the auto store or pour Coke on them when they get corroded. Other sodas will work, but not near as quick and as well as Coke.

2006-06-24 04:42:23 · answer #7 · answered by c 2 · 0 0

well if its on a car you can pour a little transmission fluid on the terminals and that will keep corrosion away

2006-06-24 04:42:18 · answer #8 · answered by jess 1 · 0 0

Put Vaseline on them. Seriously

2006-06-24 14:44:38 · answer #9 · answered by DR. HARPOâ„¢ 5 · 1 0

pour soda on them. really, it sounds crazy, but there is just enough acid in Coke or Pepsi to do the trick.

2006-06-24 04:41:18 · answer #10 · answered by danac210 5 · 0 0

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