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Traveler1960's avatar
Traveler1960
Explorer
Sep 05, 2016

Boiled one of two 5th-wheel batteries

Greetings all,
I am a new user with a problem.

I had newish batteries in my 2011 Montana (purchased batteries this year). I have the smart converter with boost mode.

Anyway, the rig was plugged into my home AC for 3 weeks and during this time I had no issues. Batteries were cool to the touch, the voltage was good, and the led converter was showing that it was in float mode. Then, about 12 hours before my departure I hooked up the truck so that I could leave early. So now the truck and 5th-wheel are plugged together with the stock 8 point cord, and I also left the AC plugged in to keep the frig cool. Next morning, one of the two batteries boiled dry or almost dry and it was so bad that the LP alarm was alarming too. Scary stuff, hydrogen enough to set off the gas alarm!!
So here is my thought, the truck connection made the converter see lower voltage that real at the 5th-wheel batteries and this caused the converter wizard to switch to boost mode. BWT, boost mode is 14.4 VDC@90 amps.

Does any of this sound as a reasonable explanation or does anyone have a better thought?

Thank you much!!
  • Thanks everyone who responded. Read all the responses again and this is just to fill in some gaps you asked about.
    I have two batteries in the fifth wheel, both bought at the same time, maybe 5 months ago. My care of the batteries is up to par, check them often. Only one battery was hurt. Agree about it not charging the truck (small wire there), but that was never a concern. The point I was making about the truck was; because of the small wire and it being far from the plug, it may not reflect the actual voltage of what the truck batteries really were, long small wire creates a voltage/current drop.

    Tomorrow I will replace both batteries and do some more testing, but in all likely hood I will not do too much while on the road. Rather not cripple my trip. I have a master shutoff for the batteries and I am connected to power for now, so I will get along until I have a better place to work on it.

    If I am able to determine the factual cause I will report back to all. You never know when someone else could benefit from my misery, lol.

    Thank you again for all your kind responses.
    Cheers
  • While you are at it, at least get the TV batteries checked! The only thing that changed in your scenario was you connected the TV so you could get a early start! You would then have the two batteries in the RV, plus the one(s) in the TV connected to the charger! Was it the batteries, was it the wiring??? Your GMC has a constant HOT connection to your 5th wheel batteries when plugged in, and that may have triggered the change that "fried" your batteries!
  • Batteries have been replace and thus far, all is well. I was able to contact the converter manufacture too, and they sent me some testing instruction. Thinking back to the three weeks of charging I did before the morning of the event I recall seeing about 12.5volts at the post, and although this registered with me as normal, I know a fully charged battery will reflect 13 to 13.5, not 12.5. Best guess at this point is; I just had a bad cell or bad battery. Time and trial will tell. Battery replacement was free, as I had purchased them from Costco, and following my honest tell of sorrow and woe, they said that they had observed some returns on bad batteries this season. The didn't bat an eye about it and this made my day. I have also added a battery hydrometer to my collection of battery tools and I will now start checking each cell as part of my battery maintenance.
    I thank everyone for the quality response to my meltdown (pun indented) and I will update this post should something change.

    For now I will end this story with a two thumbs, a smile, and an oldie but goodie, live long and prosper.

    Traveler1960