J
John Richard
By way of refresher, we have a 2001 410 (hull 304). I did a battery equalization this past week. Before initiating the program via the Link 2000, I made sure that the cells had sufficient water and all DC loads were off. The specific gravity was all in the green for each 4D and the series 24 starting battery. I left the battery caps on and the box tops off. The program takes 8 hours to complete and I stayed on the boat checking to make sure all was well. This is the second time I have done the equalization.Anyway, about 10 minutes before the equalization was to stop, I checked the number 2 battery (port) and saw that two or three of the cells had a small amount of fluid on the cap tops. There was that horrendous smell of sulfer. I looked and saw that the red LED was out on the Link which signifies that the equalization was over. I leaned down to the battery and could hear hissing. It felt warm. I decided to leave it alone for the rest of the night. I put the battery covers back on. What I didn't do was to turn off the battery charger for the Heart Interface Model 20. My mistake.I returned to the boat and saw that each battery read 15.05 volts! After removing each cover, the port battery and its cover were drenched with fluid and the starboard was dry. Thank goodness I had the covers on. The starting battery was also wet. Both the port and starting battery cells were completely dry.Here's my question:I was under the impression that the starting battery was stand-alone. Charging would come from the solar panel forward of the companionway hatch. Obviouly I was wrong. How come the starboard (#1) battery was not affected during equalization and the other two were?I'm in the process of replacing all of the batteries with seven 6 volt units in series and need to get this sorted out before I ruin another set of batteries.Any guidance would be appreciated,John Richards/v Jack's Place