โNov-17-2016 12:27 PM
โDec-04-2016 09:27 PM
Chum lee wrote:DanNJanice wrote:
Just curious, is anyone concerned about the high voltage output from these fast chargers? I know the smart charger that I have at home ramps up to 16V when it is charging. Is there a chance that other electronic devices could be damaged if used while charging?
In the video, if you look at the size of the battery cables and clamps coming off the portable charger, there is NO WAY they could handle 75 amps (@+-12V nominal) for more than a few seconds without overheating, hence the term "engine start or boost charge." It's designed to put substantial amps in a near dead battery short term for starting purposes, not long term bulk charging. If you have the proper power supply, you don't necessarily need excess charging voltage to quick charge a battery. Yes, excess voltage (above +-15.5V) can damage 12V electronics and resistance type electrical consumers. Typically equalization is a low amp, higher voltage process not meant to be used for bulk charging. Kudos to the 12 amp charger in the video for bulk charging @ 17 amps. My older Schumacher 10 amp charger won't. The circuit breaker trips in a few minutes at anything above 9 amps continuous but it does eventually get the job done. A smart charger would be a better solution.
Thanks for posting the video.
Chum lee
โDec-04-2016 08:55 PM
โNov-24-2016 06:40 AM
โNov-23-2016 05:58 PM
BFL13 wrote:
If 14.4 is the upper safe limit then please inform Trojan Battery (and others) that their specified charging voltage of 14.8 is unsafe.
Also note that 14.8 is at 77F. At 35F the equivalent voltage is 15.2, which is of course, over 15.
To achieve these correct voltages, you will need an adjustable voltage charger, or have temperature compensation. The standard RV converter can't do them.
โNov-19-2016 10:53 AM
โNov-18-2016 08:49 PM
โNov-18-2016 08:12 PM
โNov-18-2016 05:16 PM
โNov-18-2016 01:10 PM
โNov-18-2016 09:56 AM
DanNJanice wrote:
Just curious, is anyone concerned about the high voltage output from these fast chargers? I know the smart charger that I have at home ramps up to 16V when it is charging. Is there a chance that other electronic devices could be damaged if used while charging?
โNov-18-2016 07:19 AM
โNov-18-2016 06:02 AM
โNov-18-2016 05:20 AM
BFL13 wrote:
To achieve these correct voltages, you will need an adjustable voltage charger, .......
โNov-18-2016 05:14 AM
DanNJanice wrote:
Just curious, is anyone concerned about the high voltage output from these fast chargers? I know the smart charger that I have at home ramps up to 16V when it is charging.
โNov-18-2016 04:06 AM