โJul-21-2016 02:38 PM
โSep-30-2016 02:20 PM
โJul-23-2016 11:21 PM
ryanPSD wrote:
I saw 13.2 at the batteries while the engine is running. This is, all, however immediate after being plugged in for 3 days into the PD 9270.
Bought a hydrometer on the way here. One battery shows 1250-1255. The other is a healthy 1270-1275. The low one also shows .06v lower than the other.
Possible bad battery?
โJul-23-2016 08:44 AM
โJul-22-2016 11:47 AM
โJul-22-2016 11:10 AM
RJsfishin wrote:
Quote:
I saw 13.2 at the batteries while the engine is running. This is, all, however immediate after being plugged in for 3 days into the PD 9270.
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You should have seen the 13.2 w/o the engine running, if you checked it immediately after disconnecting the PD power. And w/ the engine running, you should have seen 14.2.
Your PD seems fine, but your alternator charging has a problem, as does at least one battery
โJul-22-2016 04:50 AM
โJul-21-2016 11:26 PM
โJul-21-2016 10:12 PM
ryanPSD wrote:Gotcha. I was thinking to test that connection combination, only, not advocating to scrap your design.westend wrote:
You have some sort of DIY shunt/cable connection on the negative post of your bank. What I'd suggest is to remove the cables and remove the shunt holder from the battery terminal and see how much resistance is through that connection. With two 4 AWG in 5' of run, you shouldn't see hardly any voltage drop.
Another thing you might try is to push some decent voltage through the single, lower 6V battery. Goose it hard and see if it responds.
Yeah, that is two pieces of flattened 1/2" copper pipe I needed to move and lower the shunt so it would clear the step the batteries are under. If you mean move the shunt overall, I don't think that's the issue, been good with it before the batteries. If not, you're right, the copper is the only thing new other than the batteries. I can try that tomorrow a beers in already...
โJul-21-2016 07:30 PM
westend wrote:
You have some sort of DIY shunt/cable connection on the negative post of your bank. What I'd suggest is to remove the cables and remove the shunt holder from the battery terminal and see how much resistance is through that connection. With two 4 AWG in 5' of run, you shouldn't see hardly any voltage drop.
Another thing you might try is to push some decent voltage through the single, lower 6V battery. Goose it hard and see if it responds.
โJul-21-2016 07:10 PM
โJul-21-2016 06:37 PM
โJul-21-2016 06:30 PM
DrewE wrote:
That's a rather larger voltage drop than I would expect for those modest currents. I would check that your connections are all clean and tight and your wires and terminals are all solid and good. It would also not hurt to check the voltage output at the converter when charging (with a non-trivial charge current) and at the battery terminals. I'd also check for the off chance that there's a bad cell in one of the batteries.
Assuming the voltage dip is due to an ohmic resistance, you might see a voltage of somewhere around 8V when attempting to crank the built-in generator (if you have one), which could well be insufficient for the task...and, if it's a bad connection, it would be getting pretty hot pretty quickly.
โJul-21-2016 06:29 PM
โJul-21-2016 06:20 PM