Forum Discussion
HiTech
Jul 04, 2013Explorer
O&S,
When I was a Boy Scout we want in canoes down class 5 rapids 100 miles along the Shenedoah with all our camping gear. When it did not kill us, being kids, we made camp, dragged the canoes back above the rapids and did it again. I think the only electric devices we had were flashlights.
My Opa lived with the Menonites. They taught him to blacksmith and he taught me a few of the basics as a teenager.
Fun then, but I would miss my air conditioning now. I think modern day Amish would be equivalent to living without 200 amp service and 100mb Internet. Yes this may be most of us, But gig Internet is becoming mainstream very quickly.
So to the original topic. I left the little interstate SRM 24 running the Travel Trailer parasitic loads from Sunday to today (almost exactly 72 hours). Voltage was 12.76v under load with no solar boost. This is one perky little battery (84 amp hours). Others I have start lower than that as a fully charged rest voltage. The high voltage makes me think high specific gravity, which will mean a short but spectacular life in these local temps. But I still cannot help but admire the little battery's gumption. If I ever get a good calibrated hydrometer I may try tropicalizing it.
Interstate SRM-24
Jim
When I was a Boy Scout we want in canoes down class 5 rapids 100 miles along the Shenedoah with all our camping gear. When it did not kill us, being kids, we made camp, dragged the canoes back above the rapids and did it again. I think the only electric devices we had were flashlights.
My Opa lived with the Menonites. They taught him to blacksmith and he taught me a few of the basics as a teenager.
Fun then, but I would miss my air conditioning now. I think modern day Amish would be equivalent to living without 200 amp service and 100mb Internet. Yes this may be most of us, But gig Internet is becoming mainstream very quickly.
So to the original topic. I left the little interstate SRM 24 running the Travel Trailer parasitic loads from Sunday to today (almost exactly 72 hours). Voltage was 12.76v under load with no solar boost. This is one perky little battery (84 amp hours). Others I have start lower than that as a fully charged rest voltage. The high voltage makes me think high specific gravity, which will mean a short but spectacular life in these local temps. But I still cannot help but admire the little battery's gumption. If I ever get a good calibrated hydrometer I may try tropicalizing it.
Interstate SRM-24
Jim
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