Some good info already given. The only way I see it working is having enough voltage and current to over come the voltage and current lost in the bad cell. 10 cells in parallel at 4 amps is only 400ma per cell. I have seen lead acid batteries when measured with a DMM read 12.6v and seem perfectly fine until you apply a load to them, they fall flat on their face dead. In lead acid batteries the sulfate crystals form between the plates until they touch. Making a short that only shorts when you ask for lots of current. Not advising anyone to do this but I have directly shorted the battery with a thick cooper wire. This creates like a overload of current jumping across those sulfate crystals that can free the plates. I had it work one time and hasn’t worked on probably 5 other batteries I have tried. Could be that it depends on just how much sulfate has built up.