I've got a Hunter 376, which came with a Freedom 10 inverter/charger. A single 8D AGM battery for House Battery (battery 1 on the Freedom 10) and a single AGM starter battery (battery 2 on the Freedom 10). The house battery is 2 years old. The starter battery is 2 months old.
For some time now I've had occasional issues starting the boat. Turn the key and the buzzer sounds but the engine won't turn over. It seems random and intermittent and I am trying to narrow down the cause without throwing thousands of dollars worth of parts at the boat.
To begin with, I had a very old starter battery, so I replace it a couple of months ago, but was still having intermittent issues starting the boat.
Two weeks ago while rafted out, I woke up, cranked the engine and used the inverter to power a microwave and coffee machine for 10 minutes, then shut it down. I used my stereo, inverter and cabin lights for a few hours after that. The remote panel said I had consumed approximately 20 amp hours on the house bank (didn't check starter bank). I went to start the engine to leave, turned the key, and nothing happened. Turned off all DC loads, and kept trying to start it on and off for 10 minutes with no luck. I had begun to develop a suspicion over the last several weeks that maybe the starter was bad. I knew a trick I had used on an old lawnmower with a bad starter was to rotate the crank slightly so that the starter would move to a new contact position. I tried this, and the engine started.
Fast forward to Monday of this week. I sat at a guest dock without power for ~8 hours where I used the stereo and inverter to charge a few phones and tablets. When I went to start the engine, there was a loud click and the buzzer for the engine was on, but it wouldn't turn over. I tried the rotate the crank trick a couple of time, but no luck. I sailed her into a real dock and connected shore power. I tried cranking the engine while on shore power. The engine started fine.
Fast forward to last night. I've been sitting at the dock since Monday connected to shore power, using the stereo, and running refrigeration (adler barbour cold machine which runs constantly no matter the thermostat setting.. separate problem). This whole time the remote panel on the inverter/charger has been showing AC IN is on, Charging status is "Float", voltage is 13.25.
I turn off all DC loads, disconnect shore power and go to start the engine (figuring it will work fine since I've been charging for 2 days and 2 nights). Nothing. I reconnect shore power and she cranks fine. I disconnect shore power and go drive the boat around slowly with friends utilizing nav lights and radio for about an hour. Once back at the dock, I kill the engine and try to start it again without shore power. Cranks just fine. Did this two more times, no problem. I choose not to run the fridge.
This morning I disconnect from shore power and try to start the engine. No problem.
As an experiment, I run the fridge for an hour. The inverter charger never switches off of float. An hour later I turn off the fridge, disconnect and reconnect shore power. The remote panel for the charger switches into "Accept" mode (higher charging power than "Float") and has been there for a good 10 minutes now, meaning that the batteries really were drained by running the fridge this morning while on shore power.
So I have a bunch of questions:
1. What's the likelihood I actually have a bad starter? My "Rotate the crank" trick worked once and failed once to get the boat started.
1. Why would using the inverter on Monday prevent starting? Isn't the starting battery separate?
2. Why would using the fridge when connected to shore power drain the battery starter? Shouldn't this 50 AMP output charger handle the additional load just fine? Does it indicate I possibly have the inverter/charger misconfigured?
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated!
For some time now I've had occasional issues starting the boat. Turn the key and the buzzer sounds but the engine won't turn over. It seems random and intermittent and I am trying to narrow down the cause without throwing thousands of dollars worth of parts at the boat.
To begin with, I had a very old starter battery, so I replace it a couple of months ago, but was still having intermittent issues starting the boat.
Two weeks ago while rafted out, I woke up, cranked the engine and used the inverter to power a microwave and coffee machine for 10 minutes, then shut it down. I used my stereo, inverter and cabin lights for a few hours after that. The remote panel said I had consumed approximately 20 amp hours on the house bank (didn't check starter bank). I went to start the engine to leave, turned the key, and nothing happened. Turned off all DC loads, and kept trying to start it on and off for 10 minutes with no luck. I had begun to develop a suspicion over the last several weeks that maybe the starter was bad. I knew a trick I had used on an old lawnmower with a bad starter was to rotate the crank slightly so that the starter would move to a new contact position. I tried this, and the engine started.
Fast forward to Monday of this week. I sat at a guest dock without power for ~8 hours where I used the stereo and inverter to charge a few phones and tablets. When I went to start the engine, there was a loud click and the buzzer for the engine was on, but it wouldn't turn over. I tried the rotate the crank trick a couple of time, but no luck. I sailed her into a real dock and connected shore power. I tried cranking the engine while on shore power. The engine started fine.
Fast forward to last night. I've been sitting at the dock since Monday connected to shore power, using the stereo, and running refrigeration (adler barbour cold machine which runs constantly no matter the thermostat setting.. separate problem). This whole time the remote panel on the inverter/charger has been showing AC IN is on, Charging status is "Float", voltage is 13.25.
I turn off all DC loads, disconnect shore power and go to start the engine (figuring it will work fine since I've been charging for 2 days and 2 nights). Nothing. I reconnect shore power and she cranks fine. I disconnect shore power and go drive the boat around slowly with friends utilizing nav lights and radio for about an hour. Once back at the dock, I kill the engine and try to start it again without shore power. Cranks just fine. Did this two more times, no problem. I choose not to run the fridge.
This morning I disconnect from shore power and try to start the engine. No problem.
As an experiment, I run the fridge for an hour. The inverter charger never switches off of float. An hour later I turn off the fridge, disconnect and reconnect shore power. The remote panel for the charger switches into "Accept" mode (higher charging power than "Float") and has been there for a good 10 minutes now, meaning that the batteries really were drained by running the fridge this morning while on shore power.
So I have a bunch of questions:
1. What's the likelihood I actually have a bad starter? My "Rotate the crank" trick worked once and failed once to get the boat started.
1. Why would using the inverter on Monday prevent starting? Isn't the starting battery separate?
2. Why would using the fridge when connected to shore power drain the battery starter? Shouldn't this 50 AMP output charger handle the additional load just fine? Does it indicate I possibly have the inverter/charger misconfigured?
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated!