โDec-03-2020 08:36 AM
โDec-07-2020 11:11 AM
โDec-05-2020 08:14 AM
โDec-05-2020 08:07 AM
โDec-05-2020 07:51 AM
MrWizard wrote:
Don't know what shunt monitor system you may have had problems with,
But the ones I installed, used separated sensing wires pair (shunt to meter), and meter power wires pair, worked perfectly with shunt in the positive main path,
Power for the meter/monitor should always come from separate wires going directly to the battery, to always supply and isolated power path, even better from a separate power supply and not the battery be measured
โDec-04-2020 08:19 PM
FWC wrote:
You cannot put the shunt for the battery monitor on the positive terminal of the battery! While theoretically the shunt can go on either side of the battery, practically the shunt is also providing the negative for the power supply for powering the meter itself. If you put it on the positive terminal, and the power lead to the negative terminal you will have provided reverse polarity to the monitor.
Furthermore, if you put the shunt on the positive lead, you have a high common mode voltage, which makes measuring the voltage drop across the shunt more difficult.
โDec-04-2020 08:41 AM
โDec-04-2020 08:38 AM
agesilaus wrote:
I ordered the meter extension cord, it's out for delivery right now. I'll put the shunt in the battery compartment. I have two banks of 6V, I assume I connect both negative leads to the shunt.
โDec-04-2020 08:02 AM
โDec-03-2020 06:24 PM
โDec-03-2020 01:13 PM
โDec-03-2020 12:03 PM
The neg path from battery to converter/DC panel might be mostly frame, so you will need a real wire from the shunt to the battery however long it has to be. (and it has to have the ampacity to carry the total amps of all the 12v loads--not easy to make that long wire that fat)
โDec-03-2020 11:42 AM
โDec-03-2020 10:23 AM