There was a lot of great information on batteries and electrical in some of the threads, which I'm still absorbing, but I have some specific questions and need to get straightened out in time for a trip to the San Juans the day after tomorrow.
We have a 2004 CD-25 that came from the factory with a refrigerator, Wallas stove, 2 batteries (one deep cycle for the house, one non-deep cycle for starting), and a VSR (voltage sensing relay). The VSR was installed by Sportcraft Marina down in Oregon. We have a Honda 150 main, plus a Yamaha 8hp (since the orginal Honda 15 was stolen.) The Yamaha is an electric start model that also charges the battery. Incidentally, I believe that the Guest battery charger on the 2004 model is actually the 3-stage variety, per its documentation.
The two motors are connected directly to the starting battery. The only other things connected to the starting battery are 2 Scotty electric downriggers, only because nothing else would fit onto the terminals of the house battery -- they are chock full of the other 12-volt connectors.
The VSR has 3 switches: Starting battery, House battery and Emergency parallel. I just leave all of these switches in the "On" position, figuring that both batteries will get charged and the VSR will handle that automatically. (But I don't know exactly how that device works, so maybe I'm not using it properly.)
We have been doing a lot of fishing lately, so we generally start out of Dagmar's in Everett, make a quick run to the Tulalip Bubble (45 minutes?), then troll for hours on end with all of our electronics running, with only the trolling motor running. We then go back to Dagmar's and plug back in to shore power for a week, which presumably charges both batteries. Two days ago, however, we started from Dagmar's, fished all day (8 hours or so), then ran on the main motor to Everett, parked the boat at the Everett Marina for the night and went home. We did not plug in to shore power, but we turned off everything electrical except for the refrigerator. When we came back the next morning, the motor would not start -- the battery was too weak.
So far this makes sense -- the refrigerator ran down an already low battery (duh). But doesn't the VSR protect against this? Also, when the motor wouldn't start, I of course plugged into shore power and turned on the battery charger. I then tried to start the motor almost immediately, and it still would not start. I then turned the "House" switch on the VSR to "off", and surprisingly, the motor started right up!
So...
Question #1: Could the charger have given enough of a charge to the battery, in (literally) the 2 extra minutes of charging? Or did switching off the House battery do the trick by taking the weak battery out of the circuit?
Questin #2: While we are trolling, I assume the small motor cannot charge nearly enough to keep up with the refrigerator, stove and electronics. But will the VSR prevent the starting battery from being drained in this situation? Do I have to turn the Start switch to Off, to prevent it from being drained?
Question #3: We have noticed lately that when we start the main motor, after having trolled for a few hours, some or all of our electronics (fish finder, radar, GPS and stereo) shut off and then come back on. They never used to do that, and we can't think of anything we've done differently -- it just seemed to start happening. Any idea why that would start happening?
Question #4: Does anyone know how a VSR works, i.e. what it actually does? I don't know the manufacturer so I haven't been able to find any info on the web. Should both batteries get charged if I just leave both switches on? (Whether I'm charging from the engine(s) or from shore power?)
Question #5: Is it completely insane to have the downriggers on the battery with the motors? I have a tough time believing they could draw enough current to be a problem, with the small Yamaha charging all the time, since we only retrieve the downriggers about 2 times per hour, per downrigger. (5 amps x 30 seconds per retrieval comes out to about .04 Amp Hours, by my math...)
Last question -- with all of our electronics, it seems like moving up to a larger house battery is a no brainer. Anyone disagree? Any other suggestions on how to improved this system, or even some thoughts on some better usage techniques? Should we switch off the Starting battery every time we turn off the main motor, so that the electronics never drain the starting battery? (Sorry, I know it's a lot of questions, but I need to start somewhere.)
Thanks all.
Tom and Sherry on the Caution Horse...
We have a 2004 CD-25 that came from the factory with a refrigerator, Wallas stove, 2 batteries (one deep cycle for the house, one non-deep cycle for starting), and a VSR (voltage sensing relay). The VSR was installed by Sportcraft Marina down in Oregon. We have a Honda 150 main, plus a Yamaha 8hp (since the orginal Honda 15 was stolen.) The Yamaha is an electric start model that also charges the battery. Incidentally, I believe that the Guest battery charger on the 2004 model is actually the 3-stage variety, per its documentation.
The two motors are connected directly to the starting battery. The only other things connected to the starting battery are 2 Scotty electric downriggers, only because nothing else would fit onto the terminals of the house battery -- they are chock full of the other 12-volt connectors.
The VSR has 3 switches: Starting battery, House battery and Emergency parallel. I just leave all of these switches in the "On" position, figuring that both batteries will get charged and the VSR will handle that automatically. (But I don't know exactly how that device works, so maybe I'm not using it properly.)
We have been doing a lot of fishing lately, so we generally start out of Dagmar's in Everett, make a quick run to the Tulalip Bubble (45 minutes?), then troll for hours on end with all of our electronics running, with only the trolling motor running. We then go back to Dagmar's and plug back in to shore power for a week, which presumably charges both batteries. Two days ago, however, we started from Dagmar's, fished all day (8 hours or so), then ran on the main motor to Everett, parked the boat at the Everett Marina for the night and went home. We did not plug in to shore power, but we turned off everything electrical except for the refrigerator. When we came back the next morning, the motor would not start -- the battery was too weak.
So far this makes sense -- the refrigerator ran down an already low battery (duh). But doesn't the VSR protect against this? Also, when the motor wouldn't start, I of course plugged into shore power and turned on the battery charger. I then tried to start the motor almost immediately, and it still would not start. I then turned the "House" switch on the VSR to "off", and surprisingly, the motor started right up!
So...
Question #1: Could the charger have given enough of a charge to the battery, in (literally) the 2 extra minutes of charging? Or did switching off the House battery do the trick by taking the weak battery out of the circuit?
Questin #2: While we are trolling, I assume the small motor cannot charge nearly enough to keep up with the refrigerator, stove and electronics. But will the VSR prevent the starting battery from being drained in this situation? Do I have to turn the Start switch to Off, to prevent it from being drained?
Question #3: We have noticed lately that when we start the main motor, after having trolled for a few hours, some or all of our electronics (fish finder, radar, GPS and stereo) shut off and then come back on. They never used to do that, and we can't think of anything we've done differently -- it just seemed to start happening. Any idea why that would start happening?
Question #4: Does anyone know how a VSR works, i.e. what it actually does? I don't know the manufacturer so I haven't been able to find any info on the web. Should both batteries get charged if I just leave both switches on? (Whether I'm charging from the engine(s) or from shore power?)
Question #5: Is it completely insane to have the downriggers on the battery with the motors? I have a tough time believing they could draw enough current to be a problem, with the small Yamaha charging all the time, since we only retrieve the downriggers about 2 times per hour, per downrigger. (5 amps x 30 seconds per retrieval comes out to about .04 Amp Hours, by my math...)
Last question -- with all of our electronics, it seems like moving up to a larger house battery is a no brainer. Anyone disagree? Any other suggestions on how to improved this system, or even some thoughts on some better usage techniques? Should we switch off the Starting battery every time we turn off the main motor, so that the electronics never drain the starting battery? (Sorry, I know it's a lot of questions, but I need to start somewhere.)
Thanks all.
Tom and Sherry on the Caution Horse...