rpmerrill
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2016
- Messages
- 608
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-28
- Vessel Name
- BAY RANGER
I have bragged numerous times that I leave my batteries connected on the boat and that the solar panel keeps enough trickle charge available to keep all four batteries happy. Even through the shrink wrap.
Ten days ago I stopped by for my first visit since the shrink wrap was installed. (The next day I had to leave town for a week.). Sure enough the house showed zero volts. Thruster and engine were at about 12.7. Crap.
I switched over to "parallel" for a few minutes and the voltage popped up, but you could see that it was drawing the good batteries down. I switched off the "parallel", closed everything back up and left the diagnosis to now.
Besides turning everything off for winter, I even pull the fuses for the CO and gas detectors. It has worked great for the past three winters, until now. I bought the boat in the spring of 2016. The previous owner had replaced all four batteries in 2015. My batteries had light use over the past four summers, especially compared to the previous owners. They had put over 7000 miles on the odometer cruising the ICW round trip, twice. I've spent very few nights on the hook.
I'll be going down diagnose the problem this week. Taking my volt meter and and my long extension cord and shore power cords to put some power to the boat and observe the charging over several hours. Parallel switch on or off. I seem to remember something about the relays that interconnect the batteries and the charger. Do I need to bypass the relays ? Leave the parallel switch ON ? Or would a set of jumper cables work ?
OR should I just get out my checkbook and buy two new house batteries. OR a full set of four?
Ten days ago I stopped by for my first visit since the shrink wrap was installed. (The next day I had to leave town for a week.). Sure enough the house showed zero volts. Thruster and engine were at about 12.7. Crap.
I switched over to "parallel" for a few minutes and the voltage popped up, but you could see that it was drawing the good batteries down. I switched off the "parallel", closed everything back up and left the diagnosis to now.
Besides turning everything off for winter, I even pull the fuses for the CO and gas detectors. It has worked great for the past three winters, until now. I bought the boat in the spring of 2016. The previous owner had replaced all four batteries in 2015. My batteries had light use over the past four summers, especially compared to the previous owners. They had put over 7000 miles on the odometer cruising the ICW round trip, twice. I've spent very few nights on the hook.
I'll be going down diagnose the problem this week. Taking my volt meter and and my long extension cord and shore power cords to put some power to the boat and observe the charging over several hours. Parallel switch on or off. I seem to remember something about the relays that interconnect the batteries and the charger. Do I need to bypass the relays ? Leave the parallel switch ON ? Or would a set of jumper cables work ?
OR should I just get out my checkbook and buy two new house batteries. OR a full set of four?