Nov-22-2015 07:42 AM
Nov-24-2015 09:36 AM
Nov-23-2015 07:19 PM
Nov-23-2015 06:50 PM
doughere wrote:My meter is powered from the chassis battery. Using your example should I be able to adjust the amp pot to read 72 amps if I read a 27 mv drop across the shunt?Gjac wrote:doughere wrote:Doug if I understand your post if I take a voltage reading between the two large nuts across the shunt(as shown in BFL's post)and trust my voltmeter I could adjust the amp pot to match that reading. Is that what you are saying?
Your shunt is a resistor. Your ammeter is actually a voltmeter reading the drop across your shunt. If you know the shunt's value (usually expressed as Amp to millivolt drop) you can read the voltage across the shunt and calculate the Amperage. My shunt is 50 Amp to 50 mV; so if the volt reading across the shunt is 35 mV, my meter should read 35 Amps. The most common shunts are designed for 50 or 100 mV at max current reading.
Doug
You say your shunt is 200 Amps for 75 mV. If you measure the voltage across the shunt with a GOOD voltmeter, you can calculate the current through the shunt. Divide the voltage (in mV) across your shunt by 75 mV, multiply that by 200 and you have your amperage.
If you measured 27 mV across your shunt, divide by 75 you get .36; multiply by 200, you get 72 Amps.
I don't know how your meter is powered, but you may not be able to read the voltage from your shunt, if you are using power from your battery system to run the meter. My meter had to have an isolated voltage converter to read correctly.
Doug
Nov-23-2015 05:14 PM
Nov-23-2015 04:47 PM
Nov-23-2015 03:57 PM
Nov-23-2015 03:43 PM
Nov-23-2015 02:00 PM
Gjac wrote:BFL13 wrote:So what you are saying I can't use my B&D to adjust the ammeter? Not sure what you mean by disconnect all loads to be sure both amps should be the same.
He may be right.
The Trimetric does not really show "net amps" but only the amps in or out of the battery. If there is a load running while you charge, the load will get its amps from the charger as long as its voltage is higher than that of the battery. Same with solar charging.
So the amps out of the charger or controller can be higher than the amps into the battery, which is what the meter shows, so you need to disconnect all loads to be sure both amps should be the same.
In that case, my worry about one-way amps is wrong, does not apply.
Nov-23-2015 01:53 PM
Gjac wrote:doughere wrote:Doug if I understand your post if I take a voltage reading between the two large nuts across the shunt(as shown in BFL's post)and trust my voltmeter I could adjust the amp pot to match that reading. Is that what you are saying?
Your shunt is a resistor. Your ammeter is actually a voltmeter reading the drop across your shunt. If you know the shunt's value (usually expressed as Amp to millivolt drop) you can read the voltage across the shunt and calculate the Amperage. My shunt is 50 Amp to 50 mV; so if the volt reading across the shunt is 35 mV, my meter should read 35 Amps. The most common shunts are designed for 50 or 100 mV at max current reading.
Doug
Nov-23-2015 01:26 PM
BFL13 wrote:So what you are saying I can't use my B&D to adjust the ammeter? Not sure what you mean by disconnect all loads to be sure both amps should be the same.
He may be right.
The Trimetric does not really show "net amps" but only the amps in or out of the battery. If there is a load running while you charge, the load will get its amps from the charger as long as its voltage is higher than that of the battery. Same with solar charging.
So the amps out of the charger or controller can be higher than the amps into the battery, which is what the meter shows, so you need to disconnect all loads to be sure both amps should be the same.
In that case, my worry about one-way amps is wrong, does not apply.
Nov-23-2015 01:09 PM
Nov-23-2015 12:23 PM
CA Traveler wrote:I don't understand how the charger feeds the house loads? I am using a car charger with my converter/charger unplug.
The shunt is intended to measure the battery amps and NOT the charger amps. The amps supplied by the charger FIRST feed any house loads and then any remaining charger amps go to the battery.
Nov-23-2015 10:39 AM
CA Traveler wrote:Gjac wrote:Alternate approach: Disconnect the frame ground wire from the shunt. Connect the charger to the positive battery post and the shunt side away from the - post. Now the shunt and charger should read the same since there are no longer any house loads. The shunt electronics need to be connected so that they work.
I am charging my house batteries now at 15.4 v and 7.3 a according to my B&D 40 amp charger. The meter in question reads 15.2 v and 1.3 amps. My HF meter reads 15.3 v. Once it stabilizes I will try to adjust the pot to read the same as the B&D charger reading.
Nov-23-2015 10:35 AM
Gjac wrote:Alternate approach: Disconnect the frame ground wire from the shunt. Connect the charger to the positive battery post and the shunt side away from the - post. Now the shunt and charger should read the same since there are no longer any house loads. The shunt electronics need to be connected so that they work.
I am charging my house batteries now at 15.4 v and 7.3 a according to my B&D 40 amp charger. The meter in question reads 15.2 v and 1.3 amps. My HF meter reads 15.3 v. Once it stabilizes I will try to adjust the pot to read the same as the B&D charger reading.