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furnace/heater question

mdprowash
Explorer
Explorer
Hi all... I just learned today the my heater works without the use of A/C power. What I don't know is... how long can I expect my two 6v batteries to last while running heat at night, limited LED light use and running the water for dishes and showers?
30 REPLIES 30

mdprowash
Explorer
Explorer
Maybe the .59 was fridge..

mdprowash
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for the help! I just finished measuring.. to start I have a .59A parasitic draw. Is that extreme and where could it be coming from? One led light.. .69A. Water pump 3.5 and heat with blower running on low setting.. 5.7A <--- yikes!

Strabo
Explorer
Explorer
With 2 fully charged 6'rs your fine for a week, 5 days. Do you have a suit case generator? If not buy one....

Problem solved....
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opnspaces
Navigator II
Navigator II
At the temperatures you describe with two 6 volts and LED lights 2 nights easily three nights stretching it anything more with battery damage from drawing too low. If you have a way to put some power back in during the day they will obviously go longer.

In a pinch you can always turn the tow vehicle around and use some jumper cables and your alternator to add charge. Don't bother with trying to charge through the trailers umbilical, there's too much resistance through the small wires to give much of a charge. Oh and be mindful of your fuel level to make sure you can actually get back home when the trip is done.
.
2001 Suburban 4x4. 6.0L, 4.10 3/4 ton **** 2005 Jayco Jay Flight 27BH **** 1986 Coleman Columbia Popup

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Rule of thumb is one battery one night.

Recharging takes longer when the battery bank is cold, even if there is temperature compensated charger in use.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

mdprowash
Explorer
Explorer
I have a decent meter to work with. Forgive my ignorance but if the neg terminal is disconnected.. this causes an incomplete circuit.. no? So.. how will it draw current? It will attempt to draw but can't.. and can be measured?

mike-s
Explorer
Explorer
Most multimeters can measure current. Even a free-with-coupon Harbor Freight one will measure up to 10 A (for short times - the leads aren't very heavy gauge). You just set it to amps, disconnect the ground clamp on the battery, and hook the meter between battery negative and ground. There are other places you can measure, but that's usually the easiest. Only measure one thing at a time, if you turn on more than 10 amps worth, you could blow a fuse in the meter.

mdprowash
Explorer
Explorer
thanks for the info in replies. Was looking for rough guestimate. Not sure of amp hours on my Battery Warehouse commercial batteries. I suppose I can test in driveway. How can I test amp
draw?

darsben1
Explorer
Explorer
You should be fine overnight with things as you describe.
But how do you plan to recharge them daily as you most likely will not get 2 nights out of the batteries
Traveling with my best friend, my wife in a 1990 Southwind

korbe
Explorer
Explorer
My furnace measured at 6.7 amps, so I can figure out the rest with my set up.
.

mike-s
Explorer
Explorer
My furnace (Suburban NT-20SEQ) draws a measured 2.1 amps when running steady (a bit more when first starting up). Suburban specs it at 2.7 A. So, 10 hours overnight running full time would only be 21 AH.

If you have GC2 batteries, you should have ~200 AH to work with, which would give you about a week of use for furnace only. For best battery life, it's suggested to not draw lead acid batteries down below 50%, and you've got some small lighting and pump loads (fridge? that will draw ~0.5 A, even when on propane), so you should be able to get 2-3 days. And, that's for constant overnight use, so at mid-40's (guessing furnace is actually running ~3 hours/night ~= 7 AH), you may be able to go a week.

YMMV. You really need to measure how much current your camper draws with different things on.

mdprowash
Explorer
Explorer
darsben1 wrote:
Outside temp would need to be estimated.
In south Florida 2 to 3 days
In Upper Peninsula of Michigan 4-5 hours.
and this depends on age and condition of batteries.
You need to give more info


Okeedokee.. Fall camping.. let's say mid 40s at night.. want to bring temp to 68 for sleeping. Batteries are new this year.. good shape. Thanks!

pconroy328
Explorer
Explorer
I'm pretty sure the correct answer is "it depends" ๐Ÿ™‚ Depends on how long the furnace runs, how many Amp Hours your batteries have, how cold it is outside and a dozen other issues.

That said - the general consensus is that if you turn the thermostat down (62* or so) and it's not sub-zero temps outside, that your batteries should keep the furnace running for the night.