โOct-14-2015 02:28 PM
โOct-16-2015 07:15 AM
NinerBikes wrote:
Your Kenwood TS-2000 is also a $1500 radio... KiloKilosixSanDiegoZoo...
โOct-15-2015 08:40 AM
โOct-15-2015 08:09 AM
wa8yxm wrote:
In some cases the difference between a battery charger and a Converter is the paint job.
But in most cases it is filtering and regulation.
Battery chargers tend to be unfiltered rectified AC Some (non-smart) are not regulated so you go (sixty or 120 times a second) from zero volts up to around 15 or 18 and back to zero This is ok for charging batteries. but not so good for powering electroincs.
CONVERTERS have (at least most of 'em today) Filters on them.. So the output is 13.6 volts DC with very little AC ripple. In fact in my RV is a very sensitive radio. I have, many times, chatted with folks over in Italy, or France or Germany on digital modes pushing a great whomping 30-40 watts into the wire (Antenna) and they are doing the same.. A radio that sensitive will notice things like AC ripple on the power leads. My TS-2000 can not tell if it's running on Batteries, Converter or both the converter is that clean. (it runs on 12 -15 volts very nicely).
But the converter has both very good flitering, and very good regulation..
(I mentioned some older ones, Like the Magnetek 6300 which actually had two outputs.. Both were unfiltered and unregulated.. one was tied to the battery though and that one the battery acted as both filter and voltage limiter. Boiling dry if the voltage got too high.)
โOct-15-2015 06:09 AM
โOct-15-2015 05:58 AM
landyacht318 wrote:
A 'smart' charger Will likely get confused and shut off if there is a load on the battery, and it is removed, or if A DC load is turned on and it is a big enough load to drop battery voltage.
i seen this time and again with my Shumacher. It worked OK on the 12 amp setting but voltage would swing from 13.2v to 15.6v when my 2.7 amp compressor fridge would shut off. Shut off my charging laptop(~ 7 amps) when it was in bulk absorption or float, and Red blinking lights.
A converter is designed to both power dc loads when plugged in and charge the batteries. Any of the big three converters will 3 or 4 stage charge, like the magic whizz bang smart intellicharger, but they will happily do so while the kids are turning on and off every DC load as fast as Kids can.
The Fartcharger will remember the rabid female of a dog lawyer yelling at it and dutifully throw out the red warning light, and turn itself off when a load added or removed is big enough to change the voltage or the amps required to hold the voltage.
It depends on the state of charge of the battery, if and when the fart charger shuts itself off. Most problems occur at or near absorption voltage, and might work OK in bulk with loads, or in float with cycling loads.
Im sure there will be plenty stories of plenty of whizz bang smart chargers handling cycling loads 'just fine'.
Just realize people feel better when other people buy and use the same product, whether it is any good or not, but experience trumps theory, if it can be believed.
I've not owned many smart chargers. My Schumacher is in a paper bag in 25 pieces, I release flatulence in the general direction of smart chargers.
Because 92% is not 100%, no matter how green and bright that soothing green light is, or how badly the consumer wants to believe the marketing.
None of them will hold Absorption voltage for long enough on a deeply cycled battery, despite the vehemence of the 'just fine brigade' and the smart marketing loyal minions spouting their 'gospel'
โOct-15-2015 12:57 AM
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