LiftyK
Well-Known Member
I got to the boat last night to find the carbon monoxide alarm beeping. It showed a value of 125 and ok battery. Removing it from the boat stopped the alarm so I think the detector was ok. I disabled the alarm, closed the forepeak door, opened the fore peak hatch and went to sleep in the forepeak.
This morning I noticed that our shore power, which had been connected for the previous five days, was charging the service battery at 5A. Turning off the battery isolator, it continued to charge the battery at 5A. Disconnecting shore power leaves the battery at 11.1 volts. Upon inspection of the battery (standard lead acid) it doesn’t look distorted or different to usual but it is warm to touch.
The battery is in a cockpit locker and there is an air passage to the main cabin where the CO detector is located. The battery is seven years old, Banner brand. I will replace the battery this morning.
Could battery failure have caused the CO alarm to trigger?
Is instant death of a battery a common thing? It was fine a week ago.
This morning I noticed that our shore power, which had been connected for the previous five days, was charging the service battery at 5A. Turning off the battery isolator, it continued to charge the battery at 5A. Disconnecting shore power leaves the battery at 11.1 volts. Upon inspection of the battery (standard lead acid) it doesn’t look distorted or different to usual but it is warm to touch.
The battery is in a cockpit locker and there is an air passage to the main cabin where the CO detector is located. The battery is seven years old, Banner brand. I will replace the battery this morning.
Could battery failure have caused the CO alarm to trigger?
Is instant death of a battery a common thing? It was fine a week ago.
