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)
Perhaps stochastic is the better word, but posting this to the chat to see if there are good ideas on finding a solution.
Three evenings ago in Reid Harbor we went to bed with just the fridge and masthead light on. On the usual check of the anchor around three in the morning the batteries had gone flat (four house AGMs three years old and otherwise normal in performance). I turned off the house batteries at the main switch and voltage rebounded to about 12.4. Still not good. IN the morning I experimented with pulling fuses. Sure the fridge was a draw, as expected, but disconnecting the DC Dash 1 fuse block had the most measurable reduction in draw. Included the switch panels on the dash and the head and transducer (wired differently than the factory manual). My guess was that I was having a problem with the masthead light, although I was surprised that the transducer creates draw when it is supposedly off.
Next night, anchored out in Hardy Bay off Malaspina Straight I left the fridge on low and did not turn on the masthead light. Bingo. Perfect evening with the batteries only down slightly in the morning (12.7) with the fridge on low all night.
Feeling I had solved the problem, we set up the same ritual last night in a very crowded Heriot Bay. substituted an LED flashlight for the masthead light, then set the fridge to low and went to bed. You guessed it, same result as night one. Batteries down to 12v around 3:00 in the morning. Turned them off at the main switch and they recovered to 12.5. I am currently annoying my neighbors by running the engine to charge things up.
For the life of me I cannot think of a vampire that works one night versus another. The only difference was we ran the inverter continuously while the engine was running trying to charge our Torqueedo. But the inverter was turned off shortly after arriving at our anchorage, so it should not be drawing on the batteries.
Suggestions welcome! Can't blame the batteries I think....
Jeff
ps: nice to see folks coming back from the Broughton rendezvous. Headed that way (hopefully).
Three evenings ago in Reid Harbor we went to bed with just the fridge and masthead light on. On the usual check of the anchor around three in the morning the batteries had gone flat (four house AGMs three years old and otherwise normal in performance). I turned off the house batteries at the main switch and voltage rebounded to about 12.4. Still not good. IN the morning I experimented with pulling fuses. Sure the fridge was a draw, as expected, but disconnecting the DC Dash 1 fuse block had the most measurable reduction in draw. Included the switch panels on the dash and the head and transducer (wired differently than the factory manual). My guess was that I was having a problem with the masthead light, although I was surprised that the transducer creates draw when it is supposedly off.
Next night, anchored out in Hardy Bay off Malaspina Straight I left the fridge on low and did not turn on the masthead light. Bingo. Perfect evening with the batteries only down slightly in the morning (12.7) with the fridge on low all night.
Feeling I had solved the problem, we set up the same ritual last night in a very crowded Heriot Bay. substituted an LED flashlight for the masthead light, then set the fridge to low and went to bed. You guessed it, same result as night one. Batteries down to 12v around 3:00 in the morning. Turned them off at the main switch and they recovered to 12.5. I am currently annoying my neighbors by running the engine to charge things up.
For the life of me I cannot think of a vampire that works one night versus another. The only difference was we ran the inverter continuously while the engine was running trying to charge our Torqueedo. But the inverter was turned off shortly after arriving at our anchorage, so it should not be drawing on the batteries.
Suggestions welcome! Can't blame the batteries I think....
Jeff
ps: nice to see folks coming back from the Broughton rendezvous. Headed that way (hopefully).