M
Martin Cole
I have a puzzling electrical problem and I hope someone can give me some advice, because I'm definitely over my head and it sounds like the kind of problem an electrical contractor could spend hours analyzing.I wasn't having any problem while my 1991 Hunter28 was in the water. I have a small solar panel that keeps the batteries topped off. Since I've been hauled out for the winter, it seems like the batteries are draining anytime I have the main DC panel switch on, even when NONE of the component switches are on.Basically, I turn the master battery switch on to BOTH, and the charging meter needle shows full charge (top of the green arc). If I turn the DC panel master switch on but don't turn on any of the other switches (so nothing should be drawing any current), over the course of four to five hours the battery indicator needle drops slowly down to around 50%, even with the solar panel charging. When I come back the next day (after having turned off the panel and battery switches) the batteries are charged back up to the top of the green are.Would it make any difference that with the boat out of the water the electrical system isn't really grounded anywhere?I've read the Casey electrical book and everything I could find on the Internet and am at my wit's end. I hope someone can help.Thanks,Martin Coles/v Ares