Apr-05-2015 01:20 PM
Apr-08-2015 12:12 PM
Apr-08-2015 10:54 AM
CA Traveler wrote:CA Traveler makes a really good point in how you decide where and when you place your battery bank. One more important point is to remove points of ignition from close proximity to off gassing batteries. Many place their invertors within close proximity to their FWC battery banks. Often in the storage cabinets under their Motorhomes.
3/4" copper pipe buss bar and battery monitor shunt. Note: These are AGM batteries and locating a shunt near flooded batteries should be avoided due to the corrosive battery fumes.
Apr-08-2015 10:14 AM
Apr-08-2015 09:39 AM
Apr-07-2015 10:02 PM
Apr-07-2015 08:59 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:You might want to re-think the lead coating at 7% conductivity? The article “The Tin Commandments" by AMP might change your mind on tin plating.
Heat copper with a propane torch. Then plunge it into cool water. This is called annealing. Makes the copper softer and highly crack and fracture resistant.
If you have a steel container you can melt enough 100% pure lead to dunk the finished terminal in. Slop on the plumbing paste flux. S-l-o-w-l-y lower the terminal or bus bar into the molten lead. Examine your finished piece for holidays, and re-flux and re-dip if necessary.
Electroplated terminals and lugs, suck. The plating is too thin, and tin is used only because lead is tough to electroplate.
A pure lead hot dip battery terminal is a dozen times more resistant to sulfuric acid attack than a tin/lead electroplate.
WATCH THE FUMES!
Use a painters mask and this is not optional. Do not hot lead dip around children and clean every bit up when you're finished.
If you're after acid resistant and oxide resistant terminations this is the way to do it. TIN is not an optimal metal for this, Gold is the best but, you know...
Apr-06-2015 06:36 PM
Apr-06-2015 04:43 PM
Apr-06-2015 04:13 PM
mlts22 wrote:
Would a $50 125A Blue Sea power distribution bus work? It supports up to twelve circuits, each with its own fuse. Blue Sea also has an unfused 150A, 10 screw busbar as well. That can be used with a 150 amp ANL fuse to keep boom from happening if leads get shorted.
I know squashing a copper pipe is just fine for the job, but with electrical stuff, it is something that is best just done once, so might as well pay for the right items. Of course, If I needed something for clamping jumper cables onto, the flattened copper pipes are the best thing for that.
Apr-06-2015 02:27 PM
muddydogs wrote:
I was planning on using the fuses but not quite sure what to use for the main line fuse?
Apr-06-2015 01:24 PM
Apr-06-2015 01:00 PM
Apr-06-2015 05:23 AM
westend wrote:
Ampacity of copper bus bars. Your 3/4" pipe should be fine as the load from your batteries is probably never going to be above 100-150 Amps. I used a bolt on fuse at the bus and that is probably a good idea for your project. Midi fuses
Tip: Drill slow when drilling copper.
For those wishing to make there own buses with copper bar stock, I bought my bars at Discount Steel. They have a yard close to me but they will also ship.
When I was a kid, we made our own lead soldiers. We heated lead on the kitchen stove and poured it into molds. I think I still have the molds. We also played with mercury out of thermometers, poured gas into water buckets and lit it, and I even had a Chemistry Set. It's amazing that I'm still here, lol.
Apr-05-2015 11:40 PM