nathanlee
Well-Known Member
Hello folks,
This is particularly great timing, but I've lost power. It seems, for some as yet unknown reason, my new sterling battery charger has failed to keep the domestic battery topped up. Some power drain has dragged it down to 10.83 volts, and the sterling is locked in "fast charge" mode but doing nothing, according to the multimeter.
This is a brand new red flash 110ah deep cycle battery, so I'm worried it's dead. I've just started the engine of the red flash starter, and when I swapped the switch over to the domestic battery, the engine load went up noticeably. There's now 12.62v going in to the battery, and the charger has flipped to "absorption" mode.
The worry is I have no idea why the charger let the battery die. There was no problem with shore power last night as I was on the boat. The LED lights not working was the first I knew of a major voltage issue.
Anybody got any suggestions? Is the battery going to be dead? Such annoying timing.
This is particularly great timing, but I've lost power. It seems, for some as yet unknown reason, my new sterling battery charger has failed to keep the domestic battery topped up. Some power drain has dragged it down to 10.83 volts, and the sterling is locked in "fast charge" mode but doing nothing, according to the multimeter.
This is a brand new red flash 110ah deep cycle battery, so I'm worried it's dead. I've just started the engine of the red flash starter, and when I swapped the switch over to the domestic battery, the engine load went up noticeably. There's now 12.62v going in to the battery, and the charger has flipped to "absorption" mode.
The worry is I have no idea why the charger let the battery die. There was no problem with shore power last night as I was on the boat. The LED lights not working was the first I knew of a major voltage issue.
Anybody got any suggestions? Is the battery going to be dead? Such annoying timing.