solar cell

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Nathan

I have a problem keeping the two batteries charged and had to flip the compression levers to start the engine. The charger is putting out proper amps and I have new batteries. Has anyone installed solar cells on 1986 H34 to keep the batteries charged? Just wondered about a good location and do they come with suggested wiring and a wiring harness? I saw a live aboard with three cells mounted over the cockpit (two aft and one forward) that produced a total of 50 amps. He had six golf cart batteries to keep charged. What is the good brand and who is a supplier. Thanks for your help and suggestions. Nathan 1986 H34 clarkfam@creative-net.net
 
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Michael Cohn

sounds like

Sounds like you have a problem with your charging system or your starter. Solar cells won't solve this. MC
 
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Jim Ewing

A couple of things to check

Nathan, I agree with Michael, it sounds like the solution is more than just adding a solar panel. Is your boat on shore power all the time? If so does your charger have mutiple stages? If your charger is broken it can fry your batteries in short order. Try the following: 1) Check that your batteries are fully charged. Use a sensitive voltmeter or a hydrometer to check the specific gravity of the electrolyte. If not your charger may not be working right or your batteries may be toast. 2) Verify that your charger is putting out correct voltage for your batteries. If not it is bad or there is excessive resistance or voltage drop in the charging circuit. 3) Check the voltage in your batteries before you try and start the engine and while you are trying to start it. There should be a drop but not a precipitous one. I have a two bank setup on my 37.5, 4 group 27 house and 1 group 30 starting that would never get fully charged. Then one day my charger checked out, the thing just burned up. What happened was that the charger was putting out more current than the wire connecting it to the batteries was rated for at the distance it was from the batteries. Add in an additional junction box from when the P.O. moved it and it was just waiting to break. I put in a new charger installed with the correct wire guage for its location and all my charging problems went away. It only takes a corroded cable end or dirty connector to make things stop working so check those too. Jim "Prospect"
 
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Paul Hart (Effervescence)

Check your stuffing box

Same problem only different diagnosis. Discovered that the problem was my stuffing box which was leaking much much more that the one drip in thirty seconds. This kept the automatic bilge pump that bypasses the main battery switch cycling throughout the week pumping out the water. This resulted in the run down battery and the same problem when trying to kickover the engine.
 
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D. Nelson

Batteries

I have a H34, 1983. Had a problem with the starting that was a bummer to trouble shoot. The hunter has a battery charger that was checked out and working fine. I checked the battery and the eye on the battery said it was good and charged. But pulling the battery and checking it on a meter revealed it had a weak sell. Changed the battery and all is well.
 
Dec 2, 1999
15,184
Hunter Vision-36 Rio Vista, CA.
another view

Nathan: Are your batteries fully charged? I would check the voltage first. If you have the proper voltage then your problem is not batteries but something else. You may be able to start the engine by decompression but the problem might be your valve adjustment. The valves should be adjusted every 500 hours. If your adj. is too tight this could also be your problem. Just another thought!
 
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