High reserve batteries

Are you looking for a car battery that just goes and goes and goes and goes?

Well, then you might have heard of high reserve batteries. But you’re probably still trying to work out exactly what a car battery with high reserve actually is.

Well, don’t worry! We are here to help. We are here to explain what a car battery high reserve capacity is and how it can serve your car better for longer.

How Does a Car Battery Work?

Before we work out how high reserve batteries are different, it’s useful to do some groundwork in understanding how car batteries in general work.

A car battery works on a fairly basic principle: chemical energy is converted into electrical energy.

Most car batteries use a chemical mixture of lead and alkali. By combining these two components, a chemical reaction is created. One of the components of the chemical reaction is the production of electricity.

Once the chemical reaction has taken place, the car battery gathers the electricity and sends it off to the various parts of the car that require it. There are many areas of the car that require electricity, such as:

  • GPS systems
  • Air conditioning
  • Electric windows
  • Entertainment features

But perhaps the most important job for a car battery is to power the ignition process. This is why having a flat battery is so bad—no electricity, no way to start your car.

Well, not quite. You can still jumpstart your car! But this is a little bit tricky and it’s best to just make sure your battery is always charged.

But, in any event, this is why battery reserve capacity is so important!

How Do High Reserve Batteries Work?

High reserve batteries, as the name suggests, store more energy for longer. This means that you are less likely to have a flat battery.

But it’s not just that these batteries have more electrical power reserves. Actually, a high reserve capacity deep cycle battery works but minimizing electrical output. This means that a lower charge is emitted, but the battery maintains its stores of energy for longer.

One of the more common batteries with this feature is the Adelco Battery-Silver High Reserve.

But it’s important to remember with high reserve batteries that they do not provide you with a license to leave your car unattended for six months at a time. You should still be regularly going out and turning over your engine to build up the battery’s reserves.

But the main benefit that high reserve batteries offer is that they allow you to do this less often. Also, they are more likely to come through for you in a jam!

Don’t Let the Juice Run Out!

You should now have a pretty good idea of how car batteries and high reserve batteries work. But, just remember that a car battery is something you really need to take care of regularly. You may feel confident in your jumpstarting capabilities, but some time somewhere you will find yourself without another car in sight.

So, get yourself a high reserve battery, and then treat it well!

If you’ve found this information useful, why not check out some of our other great articles on auto topics?

By Sambit