Welcome to BoatingForumz.com!
FAQFAQ   SearchSearch      ProfileProfile    Private MessagesPrivate Messages   Log in/Register/PasswordLog in/Register/Password

Battery Question

 
   Boating Forums (Home) -> Boat Electronics RSS
Related Topics:
outboard battery charging - I am building a boat and recently started my new Yamaha outboard for the first time. While the engine was running I measured the voltage at the battery and the reading was 15.5 volts. I have a 100 amp hour AGM starting battery and the battery

Help w/battery selected switch - I'm running two batteries with a switch (Atwood) which has for the Field from an I was led to believe that by these two small terminals to the proper wires I could switch batteries in mid stream. 1. Why..

Installing Battery Charger - Where's the Fuse? - Hi, I'm a new 20A shore powered battery charger. The charger is located about 15 feet (wire run length) from the battery box, separated by a bulkhead. On which end of the wire run should the go? TIA, SS

GPS Question - I have some with GPS units in auto's. Does the marine units work the same? Can you put a in the unit and it will show you the way like the one in an auto or do you have to manually put in the waypoints and then select each as..

Inverter question - I would like to wire up the inverter on my boat to be very simple to switch on and connect into the boats mains wiring. Ideally I want just one switch. I am happy for this to be a big battery switch. I want the plugs and other mains
Next:  Boat Electronics: GPS: Garmin vs. Magellan or other, WTB  
Author Message
noone2

External


Since: Nov 30, 2004
Posts: 16



(Msg. 1) Posted: Sat Nov 19, 2005 10:48 am
Post subject: Battery Question
Archived from groups: rec>boats>electronics (more info?)

I have a battery set up consisting of 4 group 24's divided into a
house bank of 3 and a starting bank of 1, controlled by a 3 position,
make before break, switch. The shore power charger is a Xantrex
trucharge smart charger.

The start battery has been running dry, while the house bank is
normal. It turns out that the reefer, while switched at the breaker,
draws from both banks simultaneously, and cannot be isolated to one
bank or the other.

My gut instinct is to sever the common connection. I believe that the
the draw down of the starter battery is a greater percentage of its
capacity than the house bank and thus the charger is frying the start
battery.

My question: Is there any reson for the reefer to be connected in
common to both batteries? What is common practice?

 >> Stay informed about: Battery Question 
Back to top
Login to vote
DavidJoan

External


Since: Jul 01, 2004
Posts: 14



(Msg. 2) Posted: Sat Nov 19, 2005 10:48 am
Post subject: Re: Battery Question [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

I think you have two problems, maybe not related: the starting battery
boiling dry and a wiring problem. First the wiring problem.

The prevalent wiring scheme for most boats straight from the factory is a
starting battery wired to the "1" terminal of the 1/2/Both/Off switch and a
house bank of one or more batteries wired to the "2" terminal of the switch.
All house loads, starting and charging are wired to the common terminal of
this switch. So, if the switch is in the Both position everthing is all
hooked together in parallel.

You wrote that the reefer, a house load, is independently wired to the
starting and house banks- "draws from both banks simultaneously, and cannot
be isolated to one
bank or the other ". This is very weird, because it negates the switch and
can allow the starting battery to be pulled down by the reefer load at
anchor- not good. Or any other house load, like lights for example can do
the same because the reefer connection always keeps everything in parallel.

So, if it really is wired that way, then the simple solution is to wire the
reefer load only to the common terminal.

I doubt that this will solve your starting battery boiling dry, but it will
at least give you the ability to do something about it. When set up like
above, good batteries and chargers don't behave this way, particularly if
they are all the same type of flooded cells, which they must be for you to
see the electrolyte level. I suspect you have a bad starting battery.

David

David

 >> Stay informed about: Battery Question 
Back to top
Login to vote
Peter Bennett1

External


Since: Jan 31, 2004
Posts: 91



(Msg. 3) Posted: Sat Nov 19, 2005 10:48 am
Post subject: Re: Battery Question [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On Sat, 19 Nov 2005 10:48:32 -0500, Marc <noone.RemoveThis@none.net> wrote:

>I have a battery set up consisting of 4 group 24's divided into a
>house bank of 3 and a starting bank of 1, controlled by a 3 position,
>make before break, switch. The shore power charger is a Xantrex
>trucharge smart charger.
>
>The start battery has been running dry, while the house bank is
>normal.

Do all cells of the start battery require the same amount of water?
If five cells need lots of water, and one very little, it is likely
that the non-thirsty cell is shorted, and the battery should be
replaced - in fact, I'd suggest that the battery should be replaced in
any case. I have a Truecharge on my boat, and the batteries use very
little water.

>It turns out that the reefer, while switched at the breaker,
>draws from both banks simultaneously, and cannot be isolated to one
>bank or the other.

This doesn't make sense - if the reefer draws from both banks, that
would mean that the two banks are connected together, and _everything_
will draw from both banks.
>
>My gut instinct is to sever the common connection. I believe that the
>the draw down of the starter battery is a greater percentage of its
>capacity than the house bank and thus the charger is frying the start
>battery.
>
>My question: Is there any reson for the reefer to be connected in
>common to both batteries? What is common practice?

Common practice would be to have the start battery powering only
engine-related loads, with the house battery supplying everything
else, including the reefer.

--
Peter Bennett, VE7CEI
peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca
new newsgroup users info : http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq
GPS and NMEA info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter
Vancouver Power Squadron: http://vancouver.powersquadron.ca
 >> Stay informed about: Battery Question 
Back to top
Login to vote
Larry

External


Since: Nov 05, 2005
Posts: 1354



(Msg. 4) Posted: Sat Nov 19, 2005 3:06 pm
Post subject: Re: Battery Question [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Marc <noone DeleteThis @none.net> wrote in
news:2fhun15coa5jn6aqh0rm9ccjlopc5ktnc9@4ax.com:

> Is there any reson for the reefer to be connected in
> common to both batteries? What is common practice?

If the reefer is connected to BOTH batteries, and all the grounds are
connected together (negative terminals), then, all the batteries are
perpetually connected together by the wires to the reefer. The reefer
should not be connected to the starting battery....at all! Nothing should
be connected to the starting battery except the engine, which is the heavy
wire from the starting battery to the starter post. The only other
connection from the starting battery is the heavy wire to the master
switch, so the starting battery can be charged from the house circuit or
the engine started from the house batteries..assuming you have one master
switch.

Having just one charger to charge it all, frankly, sucks. Get a dual 10A
charger and connect one output directly thru a 10A inline fuse to the
starting battery. Connect the other 10A output to your house battery
common point, again directly through an inline fuse. Are all 3 of these
house batteries just hooked in parallel as I suspect? I'm not a great fan
of that. I like to keep battery banks separately switched, so if one of
them shorts or something, I can switch it out of the circuit in 15' waves
offshore without a wrench. Screwing around with battery wires is a
dockside exercise, not offshore rolling around. Switches could be as
simple as those direct-to-the-post on-off switches on each one.

Now, you need do nothing. Leave the 3 house batteries in parallel to their
charger and leave the house switched to ONLY the house batteries, the
normal position, say "A". Chance of losing all of them at once is near
zero, but you could run them down. Starting battery is always connected to
ONLY the starter and its separate 10A charger. You never need to switch it
until something fails. If you only have one alternator on the engine, use
a diode battery isolator to keep the batteries separate, charging through
the isolator with the alternator output only hooked to the isolator's
common post. Again, you start the engine and do nothing to charge it all
from one alternator. Simple...always simple. The isolator connects
directly to the battery posts, too, just like the AC charger.

How are the batteries fused? If the starter shorts the starting battery,
does a fusable link blow or do we just let it explode? If you're using #2
cables to hook the battery to the starter and house battery switch, put a
large fuse between battery MINUS terminal and "ground", negative common
engine block. No circuit, including PRIMARY wiring to the batteries,
should go unfused, like all the rest of the boats on your dock....damn
them. Unlike the car, I can't just get out and walk if it catches fire.


Larry
 >> Stay informed about: Battery Question 
Back to top
Login to vote
Peter Bennett1

External


Since: Jan 31, 2004
Posts: 91



(Msg. 5) Posted: Sat Nov 19, 2005 7:02 pm
Post subject: Re: Battery Question [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On Sat, 19 Nov 2005 15:06:16 -0500, Larry <noone RemoveThis @home.com> wrote:


>Having just one charger to charge it all, frankly, sucks. Get a dual 10A
>charger and connect one output directly thru a 10A inline fuse to the
>starting battery.

The Xantrex TrueCharge the OP mentioned has a built-in isolator, and
has three outputs, so he should be able to connect one output to the
house bank, and another output to the starting battery.



--
Peter Bennett, VE7CEI
peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca
new newsgroup users info : http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq
GPS and NMEA info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter
Vancouver Power Squadron: http://vancouver.powersquadron.ca
 >> Stay informed about: Battery Question 
Back to top
Login to vote
Display posts from previous:   
   Boating Forums (Home) -> Boat Electronics All times are: Pacific Time (US & Canada) (change)
Page 1 of 1

 
You can post new topics in this forum
You can reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



[ Contact us | Terms of Service/Privacy Policy ]