lustyd
Well-Known Member
Yes, obviously. But what you're seeing is not the actual battery voltage, it's the circuit voltage. If everything is off and no charge present then the battery voltage will eventually settle down, otherwise it's just the voltage on the circuit. As a liveaboard you'll pretty much never have a situation where you can get a real battery voltage because you always have charge or load present.No way. My smart shunt and mppt read the same. The MPPT uses the smart shunts voltage via Bluetooth. Even without, the MPPT voltage is only slightly different due to volt drop. I also have independent voltmeter on the main panel. They read the same battery voltage but independently