I believe it said N70 size battery not 70ah. N70 batteries can be in various amp hr capacities.
here's some interweb blurb on it
It IS important to make sure you have the right type and size of charger for your particular battery and application, because..."The Laws of Physics will always trump the Laws of Wishful Thinking".
The following rule-of-thumb formulas are used by engineers and technicans to calculate the approximate size of a battery charger needed to fully recharge batteries (to 100%) within a minimum available time period:
8 hours charging time available equals the Amphours to be replaced divided by 4
10 hours charging time available equals the Amphours to be replaced divided by 5
12 hours charging time available equals the Amphours to be replaced divided by 5.5
Say for example you had a 100 Amphour (Ah) battery from which you regularly took 80Ah, and you needed to replace those 80Ah in 8 hours, then 80 divided by 4 equals approximately a 20 Amp charger for charging to 100% full in 8 hours.
If you had 10 hours available, this would work out at 80 Amphours divided by 5, which equals about a 16 Amp charger.
12 hours available to replace 80Ah would need about a 14 Amp charger.
source
http://www.macfarlanegenerators.com.au/ ... da-engineshttp://haze-n70-gel.com/