โOct-13-2014 09:59 AM
โOct-24-2015 08:01 AM
pnichols wrote:
โฆ No matter what the source, whenever the coach's 12V system voltmeter indicates that voltages greater than about 12.8 volts are present and the ammeter indicates coach battery current is zero or only slightly positive ... then the coach batteries are fully charged. This is a very simple and full-proof battery condition monitoring method that has worked well for us for years on AGM coach batteries.
โOct-23-2015 08:23 PM
โOct-23-2015 08:05 PM
DiploStrat wrote:
-- A volt meter is interesting, but very limited. When on charge, it tells you the voltage of your charge source, not your battery. And the rest of the time, it gives an artificially low reading as most RV's are discharging all the time. Your refrigerator is probably you biggest load.
โOct-23-2015 07:09 PM
โOct-23-2015 06:48 PM
โOct-20-2015 08:48 PM
โOct-20-2015 09:38 AM
โOct-20-2015 08:45 AM
โOct-20-2015 08:16 AM
โOct-19-2015 01:54 PM
โOct-19-2015 10:21 AM
tenbear wrote:Thank you for the compliment tenbear.
Very nice job Ron. Really professional!
One question. How is the panel attached and how did you get it off? I don't see any instructions under the hood in my kitchen.
โOct-19-2015 09:50 AM
โOct-19-2015 08:47 AM
โSep-18-2015 11:27 AM
tenbear wrote:
Let's talk real life.
It's 3 PM, your voltmeter reads 12.2v. You have minimal electrical loads, just the refrig and the CO and propane monitor. Do you recharge now, disconnect the battery for 4 hours and check the voltage (and hope the ice cream is still not melted), or wait until morning?
In 4 hours maybe the limit on generator noise will start. In the morning the voltage will be still lower. worry, worry, worry.
I guess you know my answer.