rmullette":3eijwonp said:
Well after much searching, thank god for Utube, I settled on a Weize12.8 volt-100AH battery.,https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09F2LLMY3?psc=1...
, After chargingg up t he battery I installed it in the boat. direct swap, and ran it for several hours starting and stoping. It was peforming properly. Charging at 14+ volts. Got my Grand sons over and headed out for the day. As soon as I was above 2,000 rpm my GPS said it was over voltage and shut down! the voltmeter was all the way of to the right, only reads to 16 volts. Reduced speed to idle and the Voltmeter went back to 14.4 volts. I turned the GPS back on and its voltage was 13.8, same as the volt meter. I increased the RPM to 2000 and the GPS went into "over voltage mode" and shut down. The voltage was showing on its screen at 16.9. I idled back to the dock and tied up. Shut the engine off and restared it several times. No problems!!! I went home and got one of my older AGM batteries, swapped them over and went again without any issues for the rest of the day. What am I doing wrong????? The LIPO batter allows over charging, the AGM doesn't.The engine is a 2004 BF 40 Honda.
4d
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Edited
I will tell you that I am going to be very critical for a very good reason; your and anyone else who read's this safety! You may have looked at Will Prowse's review of this cheap Chinese battery (His review is very good)
This battery is not rated for engine starting.. Any LiFePO4 battery needs a specific charging profile. The Honda 40 has a semi regulated 10 amp output of its charging output. This is not suitable for this LiFe battery!
Your system needs to have a battery to battery charger with a lead acid engine starting battery. The available battery to battery chargers mostly start at 18 to 20 amps. There needs to be a shut off switch before the battery to battery charger, and a fuse after the switch. There needs to be a fuse on the output of the b to b charger and at the input to the battery, unless there is about a foot or two between the two. If there was to be a short of any wire from that LiFe battery, hang on for fire works and most likely a fire.
On the output of the LiFe battery there needs to be a fuse, and a switch rated for that battery's output. The cables have to be sized for any load on the LiFe battery
A 120 V AC main's charger with LiFe profile needs to be the charging source for the 100 amp hour battery. 10 amps works well, and in the Chinese market there are several in-expensive batteries which work well.d
Here is a DC to DC charger which may work for your application. But you still have to have the lead acid (or AGM) battery for a start battery.. This is not a marine charger and I would only use it with a smart shunt to monitor your battery. (Smart shunt or meter is almost essential when using LiFe battery on your boat.)
What will happen if you use the system as I understand it. Most likely will damage the motor's charging circuit. May destroy it. There remains risk of fire.
I put in a "Chinese" 500 amp switch on my 200 amp hour Battle Born system on the C Dory 25. The first time I used the 2000 watt Multiplus inverter, that switch disintegrated, with attendant smoke and fire. I was using the system to run my microwave, probably a 3000 watt surge. Means still under the rated amperage of the switch...lesson: Chinese stuff is rarely premium, and may be way over rated. replaced with US made 500 amp switch and no more issues.
That is the short answer.
I did make a system I keep in our SUV to keep frozen food when traveling. A 100 Amp Hr LiFe battery, a 18 amp Battery to Battery charger. A monitor of input and output, voltage, amps and State of charge. A battery switch to output and proper fusing on all of the circuits. A 10 AMP Mains 120 Volt charger. All of this lives in a group 31 battery box, and the out put goes to a plug on a 12 volt chest freezer.
I hook this up directly to the vehicles start battery (fuse right there on + side) I use rings, and put on posts, no clamps used.