I've posted to this site before on this same issue. I'd thought it was resolved, but it wasn't. I have a Link 1000 battery monitor. Basically, at times when it's sitting at the dock with the shore power connected, it doesn't regiser when the battery is being charged. My own, uneducated feeling is that the monitor is faulty, but I could very easily be wrong. I also posted this to the C36ia list and there were several ideas there. You can see them on the "technical" forum. Basically, here is what the monitor showed on the dates indicated. The boat was not out of the dock in between those dates.
On 2/9 it showed:
-5.6 ah.
12.65 v
-0.2 a
At that time I turned on the AC main and it jumped to 12.6 amps and then started descending from there. It showed 14.25 volts while it was charging.
on 2/14 I went to the boat. I had left the AC main on, meaning the shore power should have been charging the batteries. It showed:
-51.3 AH
13.5 V
-0.1 A
I turned on the battery switch to "both" and turned on several switches (lights, fridge, etc.) It still showed 0 amps. I turned off the AC main switch and it showed -3.5 A and rising till it hit -6.1 A.
I turned on the AC main switch and it showed +12.3 A and started descending. It also showed 14.45 V.
When I first went onto the boat today, before I did anything I checked the charger/inverter. Its lights were on, so it was getting power.
So what I cannot figure out is why the Link 1000 should show steadily increasing amp hours lost when the AC main switch is on. Note: on my boat the AC main switch would control whether or not the charger gets power from the shore power. The charger/inverter is wired directly to the batteries, meaning that the position of the battery switch would not affect whether or not the charger can charge the batteries.
It seems to me that if the monitor is showing over 50 amp hours lost but 14.5 volts, then it seems there would possibly be something wrong with the monitor. Ideas?
On 2/9 it showed:
-5.6 ah.
12.65 v
-0.2 a
At that time I turned on the AC main and it jumped to 12.6 amps and then started descending from there. It showed 14.25 volts while it was charging.
on 2/14 I went to the boat. I had left the AC main on, meaning the shore power should have been charging the batteries. It showed:
-51.3 AH
13.5 V
-0.1 A
I turned on the battery switch to "both" and turned on several switches (lights, fridge, etc.) It still showed 0 amps. I turned off the AC main switch and it showed -3.5 A and rising till it hit -6.1 A.
I turned on the AC main switch and it showed +12.3 A and started descending. It also showed 14.45 V.
When I first went onto the boat today, before I did anything I checked the charger/inverter. Its lights were on, so it was getting power.
So what I cannot figure out is why the Link 1000 should show steadily increasing amp hours lost when the AC main switch is on. Note: on my boat the AC main switch would control whether or not the charger gets power from the shore power. The charger/inverter is wired directly to the batteries, meaning that the position of the battery switch would not affect whether or not the charger can charge the batteries.
It seems to me that if the monitor is showing over 50 amp hours lost but 14.5 volts, then it seems there would possibly be something wrong with the monitor. Ideas?
