Thanks again. I knew how the switch worked, but I wasn't sure if the drawing was showing that - now I see it.
Now just to satisfy my own curiosity I will have to see how I did ground the trim tab relay - with the HPU wire or separately (HPU wire may have been a bit short.... I can't remember because I changed the relay location after I figured out a better place for it (back when I was putting it in). I believe it's all the same electrically though. That will be tomorrow in warmer daylight.
Good suggestion on the diagram and Blue Sea - I'll see if I can e-mail a copy to the tech person for when we talk - that should be a lot better than trying to "tell" how it is. I'm really curious to hear their thoughts.
At this point it would be "easy" if it were just a defective part (although finding it.... not so much!).
Sunbeam
PS: Hmm, I found something interesting. Thing is, I keep thinking it's *much* more likely that some mistake was made than it is for the ACR itself to be defective. So I read the directions for the installation of the ACR just now again. But this time something jumped out at me:
Minimum connections for operation:
• Connect one battery bank to stud terminal A.
• Connect the other battery bank to stud terminal B.
• Connect the quick connect terminal marked GND (ground) to the DC system ground through a ten to fifteen amp in-line fuse to prevent fault currents from flowing in this wire.
I will have to look in the morning, but I think I may not have an inline fuse in the ground connection wire. I have a feeling it is connected directly to the negative bus. I didn't wire that part, so I'm not positive, but I can't "see" an inline fuse there in my mind. I don't know exactly what "fault currents" are, but.... maybe they are what is causing my problem?
Heck, who am I kidding. There is no way I can sleep wondering about that! :dons jacket and headlamp to go look now:
PPS: Just checked: no inline fuse. So maybe "fault currents" are what is causing the ACR to blow fuses when it clicks over into "isolate" mode? That would be a simple fix (which of course I will do anyway, since it's required). Ironically, when I first sea-trialed the boat after all the work, the battery wasn't charging at all (which I could see by looking at the battery monitor). Turns out the ground wire (the very same one!) was connected to the wrong terminal on the ACR. I switched that and it worked fine for the first three weeks of this trip, then the "mystery" started. Now I can't wait for morning so I can ask first my buddy (who is much more electrically inclined than me) - and then perhaps Blue Sea - if the lack of inline fuse is an obvious cause of the issue.
Then I'll see about properly wiring up the optional starting isolation.
Now just to satisfy my own curiosity I will have to see how I did ground the trim tab relay - with the HPU wire or separately (HPU wire may have been a bit short.... I can't remember because I changed the relay location after I figured out a better place for it (back when I was putting it in). I believe it's all the same electrically though. That will be tomorrow in warmer daylight.
Good suggestion on the diagram and Blue Sea - I'll see if I can e-mail a copy to the tech person for when we talk - that should be a lot better than trying to "tell" how it is. I'm really curious to hear their thoughts.
At this point it would be "easy" if it were just a defective part (although finding it.... not so much!).
Sunbeam
PS: Hmm, I found something interesting. Thing is, I keep thinking it's *much* more likely that some mistake was made than it is for the ACR itself to be defective. So I read the directions for the installation of the ACR just now again. But this time something jumped out at me:
Minimum connections for operation:
• Connect one battery bank to stud terminal A.
• Connect the other battery bank to stud terminal B.
• Connect the quick connect terminal marked GND (ground) to the DC system ground through a ten to fifteen amp in-line fuse to prevent fault currents from flowing in this wire.
I will have to look in the morning, but I think I may not have an inline fuse in the ground connection wire. I have a feeling it is connected directly to the negative bus. I didn't wire that part, so I'm not positive, but I can't "see" an inline fuse there in my mind. I don't know exactly what "fault currents" are, but.... maybe they are what is causing my problem?
Heck, who am I kidding. There is no way I can sleep wondering about that! :dons jacket and headlamp to go look now:
PPS: Just checked: no inline fuse. So maybe "fault currents" are what is causing the ACR to blow fuses when it clicks over into "isolate" mode? That would be a simple fix (which of course I will do anyway, since it's required). Ironically, when I first sea-trialed the boat after all the work, the battery wasn't charging at all (which I could see by looking at the battery monitor). Turns out the ground wire (the very same one!) was connected to the wrong terminal on the ACR. I switched that and it worked fine for the first three weeks of this trip, then the "mystery" started. Now I can't wait for morning so I can ask first my buddy (who is much more electrically inclined than me) - and then perhaps Blue Sea - if the lack of inline fuse is an obvious cause of the issue.
Then I'll see about properly wiring up the optional starting isolation.