โMar-15-2016 10:00 PM
โMar-16-2016 02:02 PM
ewarnerusa wrote:
I do appreciate your desire for more information before providing a response.
2oldman wrote:
Don't feel bad. Few OP's contain all information necessary. That's why it's beneficial to read all OP's posts before responding.
โMar-16-2016 02:00 PM
ewarnerusa wrote:You can't win. If you provide too much in one post, some skim over it and miss important info. If you don't provide enough, they don't read subsequent posts and chastise you for not saying that!
So it's ironic that I've been chastised about not providing extra info to nuance the question.
โMar-16-2016 01:57 PM
2oldman wrote:ewarnerusa wrote:Don't feel bad. Few OP's contain all information necessary. That's why it's beneficial to read all OP's posts before responding.
I do appreciate your desire for more information before providing a response.
โMar-16-2016 12:41 PM
ewarnerusa wrote:Don't feel bad. Few OP's contain all information necessary. That's why it's beneficial to read all OP's posts before responding.
I do appreciate your desire for more information before providing a response.
โMar-16-2016 12:33 PM
โMar-16-2016 12:04 PM
โMar-16-2016 11:44 AM
2oldman wrote:
OP explains why batteries shot
โMar-16-2016 11:27 AM
ewarnerusa wrote:DrewE wrote:
Does the battery voltage recover immediately when the inverter is turned off? If so, it may be a relatively high resistance spot in the circuit and not a battery problem. This may be a poor connection at a battery terminal, for instance, caused by corrosion or crud on the wire terminal, or a poor ground, or.....
Yes it does recover immediately. Wouldn't taking my voltage readings directly from the battery posts essentially bypass any wiring issues? I get that I would be measuring voltage drop due to resistance in the wiring if I took measurements anywhere near the inverter. I did clean up my connections after getting the camper back home in the fall, there was corrosion present when there never was before. Wiring is quite fat and relatively short, so I don't suspect a problem there. I'll see what the other inverter does which shares the same wiring to the battery (2 gauge, 5').
โMar-16-2016 11:12 AM
โMar-16-2016 10:59 AM
โMar-16-2016 10:39 AM
ewarnerusa wrote:You can limp along with them, but in the not-too-distant future they won't be able to maintain enough voltage to keep the inverter going.
But wouldn't damage also result in decreased capacity? I mean it seems like they recover back to an acceptable voltage after drawing ~90 Ah from them last night (came back up to 12.3V at -1C temp). So capacity seems unaffected but they experience much higher voltage sag under load than they should.
โMar-16-2016 10:07 AM
DrewE wrote:
Does the battery voltage recover immediately when the inverter is turned off? If so, it may be a relatively high resistance spot in the circuit and not a battery problem. This may be a poor connection at a battery terminal, for instance, caused by corrosion or crud on the wire terminal, or a poor ground, or.....
โMar-16-2016 10:02 AM
โMar-16-2016 08:59 AM
โMar-16-2016 08:57 AM