Hydraulicjump
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2011
- Messages
- 646
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-30 CB
- Hull Identification Number
- FMLT2911F415
- Non-Fluid Motion Model
- Necky Looksha VII, Liquidlogic Remix, Jackson 4Fun
- Vessel Name
- La Barka (2015)
Here is a mystery for the Tugnut electrical wizards. We are just back from a two week Desolation Sound/Discovery Islands cruise with a freezer full of salmon and ling cod. We trolled a lot and ran into some weird battery voltage changes. Seeking ideas to the origins of the problem and if there is anything to worry and/or do about it. Here are the particulars:
1) After about an hour of trolling at forward idle speed with the (mostly useless) trolling valve out (get a kicker), we noticed that the house battery voltage would start to decline rapidly. This was easy to follow using the Morningstar monitor for our solar panel. Over the space of a half hour the voltage would go from fully charged (12.8) to 12.2.
2) All normal electronics were on, including a split screen view of sonar and charts, but nothing else was in use (we have a hand crank downrigger).
3) This could be "corrected" by shutting off the engine and restarting it, forcing the charger to go through its voltage check and charge cycle (?). Alternatively, we could stop trolling and drive the boat hard to get this to change. There were no alarms regarding issues with the alternator, although I am unsure whether that has an alarm. Goodness knows everything else on the engine does.
4) Following each of these episodes the batteries were charged up nicely by the solar panel and showed no sign of an inability to hold the charge, keeping the fridge going all night with plenty of reserve storage come the morning. All systems normal. Batteries are AGM and on their fourth season.
5) Most perplexing of all, this was not reproducible. We trolled every day for about 10 straight days and this happened only three times. All on sunny days when the solar panel was working fine, producing plenty of amps. It almost seems like the charger just plain forgot about the house batteries or, worse yet, the alternator was not producing enough juice in idle (seems unlikely).
Any ideas?
1) After about an hour of trolling at forward idle speed with the (mostly useless) trolling valve out (get a kicker), we noticed that the house battery voltage would start to decline rapidly. This was easy to follow using the Morningstar monitor for our solar panel. Over the space of a half hour the voltage would go from fully charged (12.8) to 12.2.
2) All normal electronics were on, including a split screen view of sonar and charts, but nothing else was in use (we have a hand crank downrigger).
3) This could be "corrected" by shutting off the engine and restarting it, forcing the charger to go through its voltage check and charge cycle (?). Alternatively, we could stop trolling and drive the boat hard to get this to change. There were no alarms regarding issues with the alternator, although I am unsure whether that has an alarm. Goodness knows everything else on the engine does.
4) Following each of these episodes the batteries were charged up nicely by the solar panel and showed no sign of an inability to hold the charge, keeping the fridge going all night with plenty of reserve storage come the morning. All systems normal. Batteries are AGM and on their fourth season.
5) Most perplexing of all, this was not reproducible. We trolled every day for about 10 straight days and this happened only three times. All on sunny days when the solar panel was working fine, producing plenty of amps. It almost seems like the charger just plain forgot about the house batteries or, worse yet, the alternator was not producing enough juice in idle (seems unlikely).
Any ideas?