Just received my battery monitor today and looking forward to installing this weekend. Glancing through the manual, I noticed it says the monitor needs to be synchronized (when the batteries are on the charger and the charger has entered float mode) and they recommend doing this once a month. As we are on a mooring and rarely connected to shore power, I was hoping to use the battery monitor to tell me when I needed to charge the batteries and to determine how effective the time we spend motoring is at charging the batteries. Having to connect to shore power once a month sort of defeats the purpose. I am wondering just how critical are these monthly synchronizations?
Synchronizations when "known full", using battery
net acceptance, are critical to the best performance of a battery monitor. I prefer manual synchronizations only and physically program out the auto-sync feature...
What is "known full" or as I prefer to call it "cruiser full"? Simply put:
With the battery terminal voltage at 14.4V or greater the bank is only accepting less than 2% of its capacity in current..
It is very simple to determine
cruising full..
Check Battery Terminal Voltage - is it 14.4V +/- (absorption) at the battery terminals?
Check Net Current Flowing Into Battery - is it less than 2%, 1.5% of "C" etc.?
If yes to both, then the bank is pretty much full. Whether you use 1% 1.5% or 2% is a personal preference.. 1% acceptance takes a lot longer to get to than does 2%..
I have been using this method for 18-20 years as my
go to to know when to manually re-set my battery monitor to keep it as accurate as possible....
All you need to know is the battery terminal voltage and net current being accepted by the bank.
Best practice would be to turn off DC loads when doing this, especially if you have a marginal charge source such as a small charger or small alternator.
If doing this with the alternator be sure you are above the alts cut-in speed and at an RPM where you know it can produce more current than the 2% etc...
If you are on a mooring then you will want to somehow get the batteries back to full every two weeks or so. Alternators on sailboats simply do not have the run-time to do so.
You would be wise to invest in a 15-30W solar panel and controller if on a mooring. Batteries will begin to sulfate at any charge state below 100%. Sulfation is like cancer of the battery..