Vegable
Well-Known Member
I have 5 Rolls 135ah deep cycle lead acid batteries on my yacht which are one season old. They are kept on a Sterling 30a battery charger over the winter months and have a Rutland Wind generator working all the time through a Rutland regulator during the sailing season.
I regularly check the batteries for electrolyte levels and occasionally check the SG of each cell after disconnecting the batteries overnight from any form of supply and each other - always around 1.275 /1.300 when corrected for outside temperature. If in a marina visitting, I’ll connect to the 240v supply but that’s not often.
I have 4 batteries connected in parallel for service batteries, and one battery kept for engine starting.
I have an ammeter/voltmeter/ah meter connected to the neutral of the service batteries to monitor the current flow and voltage of the service batteries. The negatives of all 5 of the batteries are "tied together".
I'm finding that after 3 - 4 hours of sailing using my instruments and autohelm the battery volts have dropped to 12.3 volts and I have to put the engine on for approx 1 hour to recharge the batteries. Monitoring the current taken by the instruments (6 x 60+) , vhf radio, and autohelm it peaks at 6 amps and drops to 4 amps when the autohelm is in a quiet phase. (I don't have anything else running). If I put a voltmeter on all of the 4 battery terminals (nuetrals disconnected briefly) they each read 12.3 volts. I should add that the separated starting battery remains around 12.7v. The battery terminals are clean and all connections are Contralubed. And to complete the picture, although not bonded together, anodes are eroded as expected, with the exception of the prop anode which has always disappeared at crane-out. The anode at the end of the Brunston Prop is good.
If I’m on a swinging mooring and I run the Eber, (the type that’s heats water to fan blown radiator heaters) then I get 4 hrs before needing to recharge the batteries
By my understanding, batteries shouldn't be discharged below half their capacity at 12.2v as it " ruins" them which is why I start the engine at that voltage. I have never, ever let it get below that, not even once.
If I have ( for ease of calculating) 4 x 120 ah batteries they should supply me at say 6 amps draw with 40 hours of usage before I need to recharge them...using half capacity as a guide, so why do I have to recharge them after only 3hrs sailing?
Can anyone suggest what’s going on? Is my thinking wrong? Where should I start investigating.
( I don’t have a smart phone so answers will be delayed in responding to them)
Many thanks, a very puzzled
Mike
I regularly check the batteries for electrolyte levels and occasionally check the SG of each cell after disconnecting the batteries overnight from any form of supply and each other - always around 1.275 /1.300 when corrected for outside temperature. If in a marina visitting, I’ll connect to the 240v supply but that’s not often.
I have 4 batteries connected in parallel for service batteries, and one battery kept for engine starting.
I have an ammeter/voltmeter/ah meter connected to the neutral of the service batteries to monitor the current flow and voltage of the service batteries. The negatives of all 5 of the batteries are "tied together".
I'm finding that after 3 - 4 hours of sailing using my instruments and autohelm the battery volts have dropped to 12.3 volts and I have to put the engine on for approx 1 hour to recharge the batteries. Monitoring the current taken by the instruments (6 x 60+) , vhf radio, and autohelm it peaks at 6 amps and drops to 4 amps when the autohelm is in a quiet phase. (I don't have anything else running). If I put a voltmeter on all of the 4 battery terminals (nuetrals disconnected briefly) they each read 12.3 volts. I should add that the separated starting battery remains around 12.7v. The battery terminals are clean and all connections are Contralubed. And to complete the picture, although not bonded together, anodes are eroded as expected, with the exception of the prop anode which has always disappeared at crane-out. The anode at the end of the Brunston Prop is good.
If I’m on a swinging mooring and I run the Eber, (the type that’s heats water to fan blown radiator heaters) then I get 4 hrs before needing to recharge the batteries
By my understanding, batteries shouldn't be discharged below half their capacity at 12.2v as it " ruins" them which is why I start the engine at that voltage. I have never, ever let it get below that, not even once.
If I have ( for ease of calculating) 4 x 120 ah batteries they should supply me at say 6 amps draw with 40 hours of usage before I need to recharge them...using half capacity as a guide, so why do I have to recharge them after only 3hrs sailing?
Can anyone suggest what’s going on? Is my thinking wrong? Where should I start investigating.
( I don’t have a smart phone so answers will be delayed in responding to them)
Many thanks, a very puzzled
Mike