โAug-08-2018 12:10 PM
โAug-14-2018 01:35 PM
BFL13 wrote:
For this example just think converter instead of inverter, same deal here:
When I had the inverter to battery set up with an inverter that has two pos and two negs this all came up about splitting the amps. Using a two- battery bank---
If you put a pos and neg to each battery, then each battery supplies 1/2 the amps the inverter is drawing (in theory)
the same wires also act as parallel links between the two batteries, so you don't need another set of wires for that.
OR, you can put two pos and two negs across the bank per Method 2, and now you do need the parallel links. You don't have to worry if each is doing exactly half or just a little from one and a bunch from the other due to various possible reasons.
If you go with the first way, as soon as you get your Trimetric shunt in the mix, now you can't get a Method 3 situation, because the two negs now go to the shunt one end and then another fat wire goes from shunt to battery.
EDIT--the circuit breaker on the pos should be at least a 60 amper now that you will be getting full amps across it from the converter. Often that fuse or breaker is OEM undersized because they know their wiring makes it impossible to achieve full amps.
โAug-14-2018 11:58 AM
โAug-14-2018 11:32 AM
BFL13 wrote:
I am not clear whether the battery bank supply to the DC panel is split.
โAug-14-2018 11:26 AM
BFL13 wrote:
Yes, you want a fuse on the pos wire from converter to battery. You want a battery fuse on the battery to DC panel pos wire too. Often in an Rv where the converter is by the fuse panel, that is the same wire so just one fuse near the battery pos post.
You don't want the converter on the same side of the fuse as the DC panel, which you understand from the above, so why leave it like that?
BFL13 wrote:
IMO just have the (single pair of #4) converter-battery wires by themselves and that's that. Then have your collection of wires from battery to fuse panel, with any (each) pos wires being fused near the battery.
BFL13 wrote:
I think you have converter output with 1/2 (sort of) going to each battery. I am not clear whether the battery bank supply to the DC panel is split.
That is not the same thing as balancing, where all the amps go to and from the bank as though it were one big battery.
โAug-14-2018 10:55 AM
โAug-14-2018 10:39 AM
โAug-14-2018 08:19 AM
โAug-14-2018 08:10 AM
pianotuna wrote:
Cydog15,
Surely you can't be serious that BFL13 is being paid. Is it an attempt at humor???
โAug-14-2018 07:49 AM
BFL13 wrote:LipschitzWrath wrote:BFL13 wrote:
Besides the other wiring routes, you might have extra long pos wire converter-battery for a "battery disconnect switch" located way inside the rig, requiring extra miles of wire. Not sure if that "return" wire is from that or what. Something to watch out for.
Where might this battery disconnect be hiding? I feel like I have looked in almost every nook and cranny of this camper and never seen one. Would it be unheard of for my camper to NOT have one?
My new battery lug crimping tool arrives tonight so I will be redoing all the battery cables tonight.
No, not unheard of. Komforts had them in the kitchen on the wall by the microwave. Was a push -pull knob thing. Some RVs have them by the door. Some have a red switch , some rockers. If you can't find one probably isn't one.
If you can, IMO by- pass the wall junctions for your two short wires converter-battery. the pos and neg don't have to be the same length since it is a circuit. (You will now have one going farther to the second battery)
The zoo from battery to DC panel doesn't matter so much, but always nice to have it simple and know what each wire is for.
โAug-14-2018 07:37 AM
โAug-13-2018 10:22 PM
BFL13 wrote:Cydog15 wrote:
You're also going to find the LK will stop at 13.8 volts in the bulk mode and never fully charge in the 3 stage mode. Have one on my bench as we speak. You need the Boondocker for 14.7 bulk. We're doing several upgrades this weekend on a small fleet of trucks and there is a difference. I'm actually trying to get them to give us 14.9 bulk but in the auto mode but not getting anywhere. PDI is willing .
The one on your bench would not be deck mount PM3-LK then. I suspect it is a version of a PPC "lower portion" converter, which is still under development for its charging profile, but which will include a boost voltage of approx. 14.5v when it is finished.
Be interesting if you could post a photo of it and show its brand label with model number etc. Also where did you get it? There has to be a story there.
Your Boondocker you have said is a 1260, must be a modified version of that from what you have also said, not clear exactly. Where did you get that and what was done to it by whom? You did say it has a different charging profile that includes a two-hour bulk stage, eg.
โAug-13-2018 09:03 AM
LipschitzWrath wrote:BFL13 wrote:
Besides the other wiring routes, you might have extra long pos wire converter-battery for a "battery disconnect switch" located way inside the rig, requiring extra miles of wire. Not sure if that "return" wire is from that or what. Something to watch out for.
Where might this battery disconnect be hiding? I feel like I have looked in almost every nook and cranny of this camper and never seen one. Would it be unheard of for my camper to NOT have one?
My new battery lug crimping tool arrives tonight so I will be redoing all the battery cables tonight.
โAug-13-2018 08:49 AM
BFL13 wrote:
Besides the other wiring routes, you might have extra long pos wire converter-battery for a "battery disconnect switch" located way inside the rig, requiring extra miles of wire. Not sure if that "return" wire is from that or what. Something to watch out for.
โAug-11-2018 05:57 PM
โAug-11-2018 07:32 AM
pianotuna wrote:
You are missing that power factor may be around 0.7 on the wfco and that a a 2k Yamaha really only does 1600 va.
If the wfco does 14.6 x 75 /.7 = 1564 watts
Power factor on the PD is also 0.7
Since you may have a Victron in your future I would not bother to replace the wfco unless it fails.
Getting solar into the "act" may eliminate the need for the wfco, too.