โAug-28-2018 04:45 PM
โAug-29-2018 10:23 AM
bkf wrote:Since you are in diagnostic mode I would verify with the multimeter direct on the battery terminals. All batteries should measure virtually the same voltage once all connected. Then compare the reading to the Magnum remote. The comparison should be within 0.1 volt. Possibly a little more if heavy charging or heavy load on the inverter. Once you establish the remote is reading same as the battery then you can trust the remote to be reasonably accurate.
Thanks for continued discussion, all.time2roll wrote:
Need to separate the batteries and test them individually. Then reconnect verified good batteries to the inverter and monitor the charging voltage is correct based on the settings. Post the results.
When you say monitor, are you meaning from the Magnum's remote screen, or with a multimeter, or something else? Just curious so I approach it in a recommended way. (I'm handy with a multimeter, but not a pro.)
โAug-29-2018 10:06 AM
Terryallan wrote:time2roll wrote:Terryallan wrote:What inverter/charger do you have?
Hmmm. Every thing in my TT works just fine without a battery connected, as did my last TT. Never a problem
The one that came with it. Not something I look at. It works, as did the one in the last TT. That is all that matters.
โAug-29-2018 09:51 AM
time2roll wrote:Terryallan wrote:What inverter/charger do you have?
Hmmm. Every thing in my TT works just fine without a battery connected, as did my last TT. Never a problem
โAug-29-2018 09:40 AM
newman fulltimer wrote:
You have a loose or burned wirenut on the inbound wire at the inverter.I have seen this to many times.
newman fulltimer wrote:
IF YOU HAVE THE HEADROOM (they are taller) use of 4 GC-2 (About the same price) gives you 440 Amp Hours and TRUE Deep Cycle (whqt you have now is really a starting battery)
SidecarFlip wrote:
Keep in mind that HEAT kills batteries (especially flooded cell tubs) faster than cold ever will and it's hot this summer.
time2roll wrote:
Need to separate the batteries and test them individually. Then reconnect verified good batteries to the inverter and monitor the charging voltage is correct based on the settings. Post the results.
โAug-29-2018 08:24 AM
โAug-29-2018 08:17 AM
Terryallan wrote:What inverter/charger do you have?
Hmmm. Every thing in my TT works just fine without a battery connected, as did my last TT. Never a problem
โAug-29-2018 07:01 AM
dougrainer wrote:BFL13 wrote:
Disconnect the house batteries entirely. The Magnum charger should make your 12v just fine. If still having problems, it will be possible to trouble shoot that.
A bad battery might create problems for the charger in the inverter/charger. Your symptoms suggest another problem though.
You only need house batteries if you need to survive periods with loss of shore power and go onto inverter for 120v and battery for 12v (including the inverter)
You could be having shore power problems or transfer switch problems. Disconnect house batteries to remove them as a "distraction" for going trouble shooting, since they don't even need to be there right now.
YOU NEVER OPERATE AN INVERTER/CHARGER WITH NO BATTERIES. BATTERIES ARE REQUIRED FOR THE INVERTER/CHARGER TO FUNCTION. BAD BATTERIES WILL CAUSE SOME INVERTER/CHARGERS TO MALFUNCTION. BUT IT IS RARE, IT USUALLY JUST ALLOWS MINIMUM 12 VOLT POWER TO THE RV. Doug
PS, Some Inverter/Chargers will not even power up without a battery(good or bad) connected.
โAug-29-2018 06:04 AM
dougrainer wrote:BFL13 wrote:
I have been on this forum for a while, and have never heard of such a thing!
If it is true, it is an amazingly stupid set-up. I have a single use 2000w inverter that does need house batteries, but if I have shore power I don't that inverter at all.
I have a converter/charger that does not need any batteries to make 12v from 120v. So I would be fine on shore power with no batteries at all.
Hard to believe an expensive inverter/charger instead, would require a battery to even run its 120v. What about using the engine battery to get the inverter/charger operating using the boost interconnect that Class A MHs have?
Just ridiculous!
You are confusing PASS THRU 120 power with the CHARGER section of the Inverter/Charger. YES, I am saying, MOST Inverter/Chargers will not function the Charger section if NO batteries(good or bad) are connected. Remember, Inverter/Chargers are NOT like CONVERTERS. Inverter/Chargers supply power TO THE BATTERIES, then the batteries supply power to the RV 12 volt systems. Inverter/Chargers NEED a load(batteries) to determine what to do with the 12 volt charger section. Magnum Inverter/Chargers, if the batteries are totally dead and you connect 120 volts, the Inverter/charger usually will NOT charge the battery bank. You need to either start the chassis engine to supply excitation voltage to the dead batteries or connect a stand alone 12 volt charger for a few minutes to get the voltage to trip the Inverter/Charger to start its BULK charge. The Inverter/Charger monitors what the batteries are doing to determine how and what charge to send to the batteries. Doug
PS. the 120 will pass thru, but you do NOT want to do that with no batteries.
โAug-29-2018 05:32 AM
โAug-29-2018 04:50 AM
BFL13 wrote:
I have been on this forum for a while, and have never heard of such a thing!
If it is true, it is an amazingly stupid set-up. I have a single use 2000w inverter that does need house batteries, but if I have shore power I don't that inverter at all.
I have a converter/charger that does not need any batteries to make 12v from 120v. So I would be fine on shore power with no batteries at all.
Hard to believe an expensive inverter/charger instead, would require a battery to even run its 120v. What about using the engine battery to get the inverter/charger operating using the boost interconnect that Class A MHs have?
Just ridiculous!
โAug-29-2018 04:45 AM
โAug-28-2018 09:35 PM
โAug-28-2018 09:18 PM
2oldman wrote:
6 years is about time, especially for acid tubs. Let 'em charge then take voltage readings about every 15 minutes for a couple hours. If they're bad they'll drop to the low 12s or lower...assuming they charge up to 12.8 or so.
โAug-28-2018 07:21 PM
โAug-28-2018 06:57 PM