Rear Dual battery
- Tinus lotz
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Re: Rear Dual battery
The idea is to connect only critical things to the second battery like fresh meat and cold beer
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Re: Rear Dual battery
Good day DavidDavid M wrote: ↑19 Feb 2017 17:52 The idea behind the box is that I can leave it in the vehicle or remove and leave at a campsite with the fridge etc.....
If remaining in the vehicle I have a solar input plug and 12V input or output in the back bumper which can plug into the box inside.
Power Station top.jpg
Inside is fairly basic with battery cable input from C Tek and decent wiring to the outputs as well as the C Tek's temperature sensor.
Power station input.jpg
The red is for solar in to the C Tek and the large grey is from the cranking battery with battery cabling.
Power station C Tek.jpg
The C Tek has a marine switch as a bypass for if I want power to the front battery for winching or starting if cranking battery packs up.
Power Station output.jpg
There are 2 grey inputs/outputs, a blue input/output for higher amperages (eg. inverter), double 2.1A USB, Hella and cigarette connections. As mentioned earlier one of the grey connectors connects to the back bumper if required so I can leave the car locked while for example charging the battery from 220V. Each of the inputs/outputs is separately fused and if a fuse blows a LED lights showing which one.
Camping with friends this weekend, and they suddenly had their vehicle pouring smoke out as we were relaxing under the shade. It made me re-assess how my 12v setup is fused. (I had done it many years ago - which might be a problem as I know very little about the finer points of 12v systems).
My question is as follows- how do I go about calculating the right amp fuse to use?
If I recall correctly you want the normal constant draw to be ~80% of the fuse rating, but this should obviously be less than the amp rating of the electrical wire?
I see you have a 30 and 16amp blade fuse - for what are those respectively?
What about the trickle charger - it fluctuates in voltage delivery - or do you just use the wattage indicator on the unit to determine what amps would be max?
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Re: Rear Dual battery
Tinus lotz wrote: ↑19 Jun 2017 19:56 The idea is to connect only critical things to the second battery like fresh meat and cold beer
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I have 2 x loose boxes with on off switched and brad harris connectors, will take and post some pix later.
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- Tinus lotz
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Re: Rear Dual battery
Jip man why connect things that needs a alternator to run to second battery ? Only critical things must connect to it
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Re: Rear Dual battery
Ruan - I would determine the fuse sizes by "phoning a friend" - ie. Jacques from Bushpower.NoPressure wrote: ↑07 May 2019 10:13Good day DavidDavid M wrote: ↑19 Feb 2017 17:52 The idea behind the box is that I can leave it in the vehicle or remove and leave at a campsite with the fridge etc.....
If remaining in the vehicle I have a solar input plug and 12V input or output in the back bumper which can plug into the box inside.
Power Station top.jpg
Inside is fairly basic with battery cable input from C Tek and decent wiring to the outputs as well as the C Tek's temperature sensor.
Power station input.jpg
The red is for solar in to the C Tek and the large grey is from the cranking battery with battery cabling.
Power station C Tek.jpg
The C Tek has a marine switch as a bypass for if I want power to the front battery for winching or starting if cranking battery packs up.
Power Station output.jpg
There are 2 grey inputs/outputs, a blue input/output for higher amperages (eg. inverter), double 2.1A USB, Hella and cigarette connections. As mentioned earlier one of the grey connectors connects to the back bumper if required so I can leave the car locked while for example charging the battery from 220V. Each of the inputs/outputs is separately fused and if a fuse blows a LED lights showing which one.
Camping with friends this weekend, and they suddenly had their vehicle pouring smoke out as we were relaxing under the shade. It made me re-assess how my 12v setup is fused. (I had done it many years ago - which might be a problem as I know very little about the finer points of 12v systems).
My question is as follows- how do I go about calculating the right amp fuse to use?
If I recall correctly you want the normal constant draw to be ~80% of the fuse rating, but this should obviously be less than the amp rating of the electrical wire?
I see you have a 30 and 16amp blade fuse - for what are those respectively?
What about the trickle charger - it fluctuates in voltage delivery - or do you just use the wattage indicator on the unit to determine what amps would be max?
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Re: Rear Dual battery
Essentially I first check the power draw of what is connected, if it is a fridge: Snomaster 66L is rated at 5 amps so I would put in a fuse of Minimum 7.5A and maybe 10A. Or if you don't know what you are going to connect, put in a fuse rated lower than the wire thickness, you want the fuse to pop before your wires ignite. That can be calculated with https://www.solar-wind.co.uk/info/dc-cable-sizing-tool and adjusting "acceptable losses" between 3-5% But phoning a friend is the best and safest just to check if he concurs.
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Re: Rear Dual battery
So I found out 2 years later what that clicking was... I ended up replacing the whole bushpower unit with a ctek... and it never quite worked at expectation. Long trip the battery would not charge and I would have warm beer. I was beginning to get very disillusioned over the whole dual battery story. Then the ctek stopped charging and had all lights flashing... that particular combination was not in the manual, but it clearly indicated something was not quite correct.
I hauled the battery box out and put it on an ac- dc charger. First direct to the battery in recon mode, thinking the battery was faulty. Then after it was charged I connected the ctek dc-dc charger in 12v supply mode and it worked perfectly. So the charger was not the problem. I traced the Wi-Fi g to the main battery and opened the fuse holder.
Somebody had not pinched the But holding the 50A fuse in and it had worked loose. Having done the whole thing myself there was not many people to blame. But the fuse nut had held for about 6 months before coming loose. Vibrating it was always kicking solenoid in and out hence the clicking on the bushpower unit. And it got worse with time and the ctek obviously just got confused and shut down.
Since tightening the fuse I always have a fully charged battery.
The fuse holder was melted on the inside. Obviously the loose connection was arcing the whole time.
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Re: Rear Dual battery
Morning All!
I'm requesting some insight from anyone at all
So currently I have a 90ah crank battery and a 102ah semi-deep cycle (marine battery) as the second battery. Running standard 110amp alternator through the National Luna smart solenoid setup.
When at camp etc, I have a rooftop 150w solar panel which I manually swap over to. This provides around 5-7amps. So far I have had zero issues* for the last ± 4 years, but this is due to a lot of luck as not often have I had overcast / rainy weather conditions while away.
Now I get to my point. I have a spare deep-cycle battery at home, a 150ah 45kg monster from home solar setup. Battery is still good. Would this be a viable option if my 102ah packs up? My Waeco and other accessories would run for days off that, but it would take a LONG drive and to get the charge back up if it's still not being topped up by the solar panels during the day. Is it better to have extra amps 'in the bank' at the cost of extra weight? Or save 20kgs and know that your battery can be charged back up to full with a few hours of driving?
NOTE: I do also have a 220v conversion so I can trickle charge the batteries up off Eishkom grid at camp sites which supply.
* Zero issues other than a faulty plug, that is. My advise is that if you have a fridge permanently installed in your Patrol, hard wire it directly to you regulator / 12v system and throw that cigarette lighter plug socket away. Too many amps get lost due to heat.
I'm requesting some insight from anyone at all
So currently I have a 90ah crank battery and a 102ah semi-deep cycle (marine battery) as the second battery. Running standard 110amp alternator through the National Luna smart solenoid setup.
When at camp etc, I have a rooftop 150w solar panel which I manually swap over to. This provides around 5-7amps. So far I have had zero issues* for the last ± 4 years, but this is due to a lot of luck as not often have I had overcast / rainy weather conditions while away.
Now I get to my point. I have a spare deep-cycle battery at home, a 150ah 45kg monster from home solar setup. Battery is still good. Would this be a viable option if my 102ah packs up? My Waeco and other accessories would run for days off that, but it would take a LONG drive and to get the charge back up if it's still not being topped up by the solar panels during the day. Is it better to have extra amps 'in the bank' at the cost of extra weight? Or save 20kgs and know that your battery can be charged back up to full with a few hours of driving?
NOTE: I do also have a 220v conversion so I can trickle charge the batteries up off Eishkom grid at camp sites which supply.
* Zero issues other than a faulty plug, that is. My advise is that if you have a fridge permanently installed in your Patrol, hard wire it directly to you regulator / 12v system and throw that cigarette lighter plug socket away. Too many amps get lost due to heat.
Rhett
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Re: Rear Dual battery
I guess more is always more. But that's a lot of extra weight to lug, and a fee days into the trip, you will basically be in the same boat. Once you have used that extra 50Ah, then you still need to put in what you use.
If you have the space and the payload available, by all means use it. But I suspect you would be better served by increasing your solar input. They still give some power even when it's overcast.
If you have the space and the payload available, by all means use it. But I suspect you would be better served by increasing your solar input. They still give some power even when it's overcast.
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