Mischief Managed
Guru
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2018
- Messages
- 720
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Mischief Managed II
- Vessel Make
- 1992 Tollycraft 44 CPMY
Recently returned from a cruise where we went 17 days straight without a shore power connection. Three times during the 17 days, the house battery voltage would drop to 11.8V and stay there as the SOC meter dropped to 60% to 65% while the genset was not running. This issue would only resolve itself when we moved the boat from port to port on our cruise.
The steady current draw was relatively stable at 14 amps from the 615AH 12V FLA golf cart battery bank and the occasional big loads (180+ amps), like the microwave or coffee maker would draw, were easily delivered without excessive voltage drop regardless of the low voltage condition or not. In other words, if the voltage was at 11.8 with 14 amps and I ran the microwave which added 166 amps to the load, the voltage would drop to 11.5ish volts, which is the same as it would drop to if the starting voltage was 12.5 volts and the extra 166 amp load was applied.
I suspect I have one intermittently bad cell in one of my 6 GC batteries. They are 4 years old and have been used off shore power quite a bit. I ran a couple of equalization cycles on them, but it did not seem to matter.
Any thoughts would be appreciated. If I replace the batteries, it will be at the start of next season.
The steady current draw was relatively stable at 14 amps from the 615AH 12V FLA golf cart battery bank and the occasional big loads (180+ amps), like the microwave or coffee maker would draw, were easily delivered without excessive voltage drop regardless of the low voltage condition or not. In other words, if the voltage was at 11.8 with 14 amps and I ran the microwave which added 166 amps to the load, the voltage would drop to 11.5ish volts, which is the same as it would drop to if the starting voltage was 12.5 volts and the extra 166 amp load was applied.
I suspect I have one intermittently bad cell in one of my 6 GC batteries. They are 4 years old and have been used off shore power quite a bit. I ran a couple of equalization cycles on them, but it did not seem to matter.
Any thoughts would be appreciated. If I replace the batteries, it will be at the start of next season.