Forum Discussion
ewarnerusa
Jun 01, 2013Nomad
Salvo wrote:
The batteries could be the problem. The spike you're seeing is the change in charging current (when load is disconnected), multiplied by the internal resistance of the batteries. The greater the resistance, the larger the "spike".
If the batteries were low on water then they could be sulfated. The more they get sulfated, the greater the battery resistance becomes, resulting in bigger "spikes".
Your batteries are small to begin with. This means they already have an inherent larger resistance. You can get a measure of resistance without an amp meter. With solar charging, and battery around 14.4V, toggle your load that you normally use. Measure volts directly at batteries immediately before and after removing the load. We're interested in the voltage difference between the two measurements. Do this 5 or 6 times to get a consistent measurement. What's the estimated load current you are toggling?
Sal
The voltage readings I've been reporting are right at the batteries using the Morningstar controller voltmeter. I'm using voltage sense wires. 14.40V is the reading both before and after the spikes, right at the battery. I also have been taking readings right at the inverter input terminals and the reading is the same as at the batteries. The kill-a-watt reports that the AC draw of the laptop charger is 90 watts/0.8A. I don't know what the DC draw is, I don't have a way of measuring that.
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