Silas Carpy wrote:
New to rving as of May this year so first time winterizing. If I understood everything I read, including owners manual, I can leave batteries in rv and connect to shore cord and inverter will maintain charge. I’ve had it hooked for about 3-4 weeks now. I’ve been monitoring the batteries and today the 12 volt chassis battery was at 11.55 volts and the 6 volt coach batteries were 5.85. Does this method not maintain charge. 2009 Fleetwood pulse on dodge/Mercedes’ sprinter. Thanks.
If an inverter/charger, make sure the charger is "enabled" and there is 120v to the rig such as to the MW
If a converter, make sure it has 120v input. On that,
A. be sure there is 120v to the RV--see if the MW is lit. If so,
B. check for 120v to the converter. If so,
C. check the converter's RP fuses, check the battery fuse (or DC CB if that)
D.snap off the converter's 120v CB and see if the 12v lights work from battery (they will be dim at the reported voltage, but should still work)--if they do the battery fuse is ok, so that leaves the RP fuses if there is 120v to the converter.
The engine battery needs its own maintenance charger--it does not get any from the converter or inverter/charger. Various ways to arrange that-Trickle Charge eg.
1. 1991 Oakland 28DB Class C
on Ford E350-460-7.5 Gas EFI
Photo in Profile
2. 1991 Bighorn 9.5ft Truck Camper on 2003 Chev 2500HD 6.0 Gas
See Profile for Electronic set-ups for 1. and 2.