If it's charging at 22V then it's cooking the batteries worse than third-day-lucky fishcakes.
The absolute MAXIMUM a 12V lead acid (excluding gels, keep reading) should EVER be charged at is 15V - you can, if you are using a charger that knows what it's doing (read "C-Tek") get that up to 16V during an equalisation phase - again, only for batteries OTHER than gel batteries.
Equalisation is important, because it helps remove the sulphation caused by cycling a battery below full charge (actually the crystals can form at 99% charge but the rate is very low, they start in earnest with a wet cell @ about 50% charge).
Anything over 14.1V cooks a gel, period. The problem with gel batteries is the silicate added to the sulphuric acid to make it a jelly really does make it a jelly. When an air bubble forms in the jelly, it stays there. As all the little bubbles form over time, eventually there's no path through the acid for any reaction to occur and the cell dies - end of battery.
Normal wet-cell batteries and AGM batteries don't suffer from this particular problem because they are a true liquid (not a jelly), so when a bubble forms it can rise to the top and burst, restoring the pathway for the reaction in the battery that produces power.
The controller should regulate the power to a voltage matching the requirement of the battery being charged and should be able to discern the difference between gel and other types either by measuring the battery (internal resistance) or by dip switch.
If there's nothing in the manual to indicate a regulated output, yes I'd toss it. Jaycar sell a decent 20A-20A controller that uses a dip switch to choose between gel/other batteries. It's quite a good unit.
The absolute MAXIMUM a 12V lead acid (excluding gels, keep reading) should EVER be charged at is 15V - you can, if you are using a charger that knows what it's doing (read "C-Tek") get that up to 16V during an equalisation phase - again, only for batteries OTHER than gel batteries.
Equalisation is important, because it helps remove the sulphation caused by cycling a battery below full charge (actually the crystals can form at 99% charge but the rate is very low, they start in earnest with a wet cell @ about 50% charge).
Anything over 14.1V cooks a gel, period. The problem with gel batteries is the silicate added to the sulphuric acid to make it a jelly really does make it a jelly. When an air bubble forms in the jelly, it stays there. As all the little bubbles form over time, eventually there's no path through the acid for any reaction to occur and the cell dies - end of battery.
Normal wet-cell batteries and AGM batteries don't suffer from this particular problem because they are a true liquid (not a jelly), so when a bubble forms it can rise to the top and burst, restoring the pathway for the reaction in the battery that produces power.
The controller should regulate the power to a voltage matching the requirement of the battery being charged and should be able to discern the difference between gel and other types either by measuring the battery (internal resistance) or by dip switch.
If there's nothing in the manual to indicate a regulated output, yes I'd toss it. Jaycar sell a decent 20A-20A controller that uses a dip switch to choose between gel/other batteries. It's quite a good unit.