Pat Anderson
New member
OK, you all know the story of how I put a red cable on a black post on my starting battery and burned all the insulation off the cables, and we are not sure what all else...well, I replaced all those cables, and charged the batteries up, thought all was well...the batteries held their charge, no problem, right? Wrong.
This past weekend, we went out to Andrews Bay on Lake Washington. Right off the bat, the house battery was fading fast with little or no load on it...12.8...12.6....12.4....12.2 (house battery voltages per Navman), so, something is not right. OK, we didn't run the refrigerator at all, and we didn't run the Wallas all night per usual. In the morning, we ran the engine for a couple of hours to put some charge back on.
Tried to start the Wallas, light went on momentarily, then off, then a phenolic smell and she was deader than a doornail. I will replace the 2 amp fuse from the circuit board (not an easy item to find in podunk Snoqualmie, evidently not a standard automotive item), but from the smell I think she may be fried. Thread for a different day...
Went to leave, not enough juice in the battery to operate the windlass - solved that one, not a good permanent solution, by disengaging the gearshift and running the engine up to provide enough amps to get the anchor out.
Back home, I charged up the batteries - both went to 13+ volts. Have been measuring the voltage daily with the DVM, after a day, both start and house settled in at 12.6 - 12.7 volts (chart says that is 100%) with both battery switches off. Then I turned on the house switch with all circuit breakers at the helm off - overnight, it dropped to 12.45 volts.
The house and starting circuits go through a BEP 716 battery cluster. The battery cluster itself is an awkward assembly of four separate components, three switches and the VSR - they are sort of loosely connected but fall apart when unscrewed from their mounted position. The plastic housing of one of the switches is broken. So the problem could be in the battery cluster, or it could be in the wiring downstream of the battery cluster - there is no evidence of any melted insulation or anything downstream of the battery cluster.
I think I need to replace this guy, whether it is the source of the problem or not, just because it is physically broken. But I am not sure I want to replace it with the same thing. The literature that I got says the VSR directs all the charge from the alternator to the starting battery until it reaches 13.7 volts, then combines the batteries for further charging, then disconnects the batteries when the engine is off and the voltage has fallen to 12.8 volts. So, question number one is, what happens if the starting battery never gets to 13.7 volts? I would assume if that happens, the house battery never gets charged, right? Putting an automotive 10 amp charger on the starting battery, it in fact goes up to a little over 13 volts, but it never reaches 13.7 - this could explain why running the engine did no good for the house battery. There is another system, the Blue Sea 7650 Add a Battery, which is two separate components, one is a standard 1- 2 - Both battery switch, and the other is a relay that combines the batteries for charging. This seems like a lot better solution than the BEP switch, right? They are about the same price, and I will be getting one or the other, if anybody can tell me why getting another BEP makes any sense at all, or why not getting the Blue Sea makes sense, please let me know!
But really, the big question is, what strategy should I employ to find out why the house battery is getting drained so fast? I am thinking first just to wire up the batteries in parallel, eliminating the BEP battery cluster, since it has to go anyway...if the batteries stay up at a reasonable voltage with the switches on but no load, I can conclude the problem was in fact the BEP battery cluster. Is there any reason I should not do that? If it turns out the BEP battery cluster is not the problem, well, then I guess I need a real boat electrician, since the problem would be somewhere south of where the bundle of wire disappears under the cockpit floor... Any and all advice welcome here, I really need this solved before Friday Harbor!
This past weekend, we went out to Andrews Bay on Lake Washington. Right off the bat, the house battery was fading fast with little or no load on it...12.8...12.6....12.4....12.2 (house battery voltages per Navman), so, something is not right. OK, we didn't run the refrigerator at all, and we didn't run the Wallas all night per usual. In the morning, we ran the engine for a couple of hours to put some charge back on.
Tried to start the Wallas, light went on momentarily, then off, then a phenolic smell and she was deader than a doornail. I will replace the 2 amp fuse from the circuit board (not an easy item to find in podunk Snoqualmie, evidently not a standard automotive item), but from the smell I think she may be fried. Thread for a different day...
Went to leave, not enough juice in the battery to operate the windlass - solved that one, not a good permanent solution, by disengaging the gearshift and running the engine up to provide enough amps to get the anchor out.
Back home, I charged up the batteries - both went to 13+ volts. Have been measuring the voltage daily with the DVM, after a day, both start and house settled in at 12.6 - 12.7 volts (chart says that is 100%) with both battery switches off. Then I turned on the house switch with all circuit breakers at the helm off - overnight, it dropped to 12.45 volts.
The house and starting circuits go through a BEP 716 battery cluster. The battery cluster itself is an awkward assembly of four separate components, three switches and the VSR - they are sort of loosely connected but fall apart when unscrewed from their mounted position. The plastic housing of one of the switches is broken. So the problem could be in the battery cluster, or it could be in the wiring downstream of the battery cluster - there is no evidence of any melted insulation or anything downstream of the battery cluster.
I think I need to replace this guy, whether it is the source of the problem or not, just because it is physically broken. But I am not sure I want to replace it with the same thing. The literature that I got says the VSR directs all the charge from the alternator to the starting battery until it reaches 13.7 volts, then combines the batteries for further charging, then disconnects the batteries when the engine is off and the voltage has fallen to 12.8 volts. So, question number one is, what happens if the starting battery never gets to 13.7 volts? I would assume if that happens, the house battery never gets charged, right? Putting an automotive 10 amp charger on the starting battery, it in fact goes up to a little over 13 volts, but it never reaches 13.7 - this could explain why running the engine did no good for the house battery. There is another system, the Blue Sea 7650 Add a Battery, which is two separate components, one is a standard 1- 2 - Both battery switch, and the other is a relay that combines the batteries for charging. This seems like a lot better solution than the BEP switch, right? They are about the same price, and I will be getting one or the other, if anybody can tell me why getting another BEP makes any sense at all, or why not getting the Blue Sea makes sense, please let me know!
But really, the big question is, what strategy should I employ to find out why the house battery is getting drained so fast? I am thinking first just to wire up the batteries in parallel, eliminating the BEP battery cluster, since it has to go anyway...if the batteries stay up at a reasonable voltage with the switches on but no load, I can conclude the problem was in fact the BEP battery cluster. Is there any reason I should not do that? If it turns out the BEP battery cluster is not the problem, well, then I guess I need a real boat electrician, since the problem would be somewhere south of where the bundle of wire disappears under the cockpit floor... Any and all advice welcome here, I really need this solved before Friday Harbor!