โOct-16-2016 06:38 AM
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โOct-17-2016 06:18 PM
โOct-17-2016 12:17 PM
โOct-17-2016 08:26 AM
โOct-17-2016 07:01 AM
bankerae wrote:theoldwizard1 wrote:bankerae wrote:
I am getting the 650MA draw with fridge turned OFF, not ON. When I remove the fuse for the fridge it drops to 110MA which I believe is in the normal range for nothing runningbankerae wrote:smkettner wrote:
So apparently the fridge still draws power when on or off. Fridge is on when camping so that is what matters.
good point! I need to see what it draws when turned on, which I have not done yet. However, I still have an issue if when turned off it kills my battery in a few short hours when parked.
I don't know why a 'fridge, running on propane, would draw any power ! Even with electronic ignition, 650ma seems like a lot.
This UNI-T UT210E amp clamp is <$35 !
I agree! So I just checked it in the "ON" propane position and I jump up another 350MA. So to be clear...
When the fridge is turned "OFF" it pulls 540MA and when it is "ON" in the propane mode it jumps to 890MA total, or an increase in 350MA... Something is not right here :?
โOct-17-2016 06:37 AM
bankerae wrote:
When the fridge is turned "OFF" it pulls 540MA and when it is "ON" in the propane mode it jumps to 890MA total, or an increase in 350MA... Something is not right here :?
โOct-17-2016 05:00 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:bankerae wrote:
I am getting the 650MA draw with fridge turned OFF, not ON. When I remove the fuse for the fridge it drops to 110MA which I believe is in the normal range for nothing runningbankerae wrote:smkettner wrote:
So apparently the fridge still draws power when on or off. Fridge is on when camping so that is what matters.
good point! I need to see what it draws when turned on, which I have not done yet. However, I still have an issue if when turned off it kills my battery in a few short hours when parked.
I don't know why a 'fridge, running on propane, would draw any power ! Even with electronic ignition, 650ma seems like a lot.
This UNI-T UT210E amp clamp is <$35 !
โOct-16-2016 09:53 PM
bankerae wrote:
I am getting the 650MA draw with fridge turned OFF, not ON. When I remove the fuse for the fridge it drops to 110MA which I believe is in the normal range for nothing running
bankerae wrote:smkettner wrote:
So apparently the fridge still draws power when on or off. Fridge is on when camping so that is what matters.
good point! I need to see what it draws when turned on, which I have not done yet. However, I still have an issue if when turned off it kills my battery in a few short hours when parked.
โOct-16-2016 06:07 PM
smkettner wrote:
So apparently the fridge still draws power when on or off. Fridge is on when camping so that is what matters.
โOct-16-2016 06:03 PM
โOct-16-2016 05:05 PM
smkettner wrote:
My trailer idles at 500 milliamps running the fridge. I call 650 normal. Fridge does not take much either (200 milliamps?) unless you have a humidity control that is on.
I assume you charged the battery at home and were running the fridge and some lights while camping. Was the battery near dead before you charged at home? Lead-acid really likes to stay 100% tip top charged for longest life. If the battery was allowed to sit partially discharged in storage it may have sulfated and permanently lost some capacity.
I assume you have a WFCO converter and just saying these generally operate at a fixed 13.6 volts. This is just a trickle charge and will take 24 to 48 hours to charge a low battery. Battery really wants 14.4 to 14.8 volts for charging properly in reasonable time.
Typical dealer just pops in a small group 24 with 80 amp/hour capacity. For off-grid camping you probably need 2x group 27 or 2x GC2 for closer to 200-230 amp/hours.
The 12 Volt Side of Life
โOct-16-2016 04:12 PM
โOct-16-2016 03:33 PM
smkettner wrote:
650 milliamps idling is normal. Furnace blower draws much more in the order of 8 to 12 amps. You probably had a less than fully charged battery going into the evening.
Did you charge that battery? Using what? WFCO converter? ๐
โOct-16-2016 01:36 PM
โOct-16-2016 01:28 PM
Artum Snowbird wrote:
You may well just be looking at poor connections from your battery to your converter. A weak connection will act like a huge load to your battery and not even be something you notice.
Wiggle the positive and negative wires in the converter terminal strip, tighten everything you can.
I had a very loose negative wire at my converter, after 4 days plugged in the battery read 11.9 volts and everything was shutting down. I wiggled the wires, and bingo, lights suddenly came bright inside the rig as converter power got to the battery.