โJan-02-2018 12:28 PM
โJan-07-2018 06:56 PM
โJan-04-2018 05:20 AM
MrWizard wrote:
You will have to isolated the furnace circuit
12v hot and ground of the heater from the fuse box, and attach to the new battery
To me it makes more sense to just double the size of the current bank by adding the new battery
Instead off trying to sperate circuits , using one battery for just the heater and having to charge them separately
โJan-03-2018 07:11 AM
โJan-03-2018 04:24 AM
westend wrote:
I don't see any of the dreaded draining or capacity loss that some theorize.
โJan-03-2018 02:18 AM
โJan-03-2018 12:53 AM
Vintage465 wrote:
Gordon Three and Drew,
I've noticed when the heater is running on a cold evening, then we have a couple lights on and turn on the water, the lights dim and the heater fan slows. This would leave the heater alone when we mess with other 12v draws. Also, on a real cold night, say 20-30 degrees and the heater cycles through out the night and pulls the battery down to say 40%, I will wake up to nice bright lights and easy running pump. Really that's the whole idea.
โJan-02-2018 07:38 PM
GordonThree wrote:Vintage465 wrote:GordonThree wrote:
Another 2x 6v batteries should cure those issues. A battery drain protector between the bank and the furnace will stop it from draining too much from the bank.
Have you switched your lights to LED yet, preferably the kind with built in regulators?
We have all LED lights in our trailer from the factory.
Something's wrong with a connection then, as another poster previously suggested. Have you separated the batteries and checked cell volts after a good charge and rest?
โJan-02-2018 07:12 PM
Vintage465 wrote:GordonThree wrote:
Another 2x 6v batteries should cure those issues. A battery drain protector between the bank and the furnace will stop it from draining too much from the bank.
Have you switched your lights to LED yet, preferably the kind with built in regulators?
We have all LED lights in our trailer from the factory.
โJan-02-2018 06:46 PM
GordonThree wrote:
Another 2x 6v batteries should cure those issues. A battery drain protector between the bank and the furnace will stop it from draining too much from the bank.
Have you switched your lights to LED yet, preferably the kind with built in regulators?
โJan-02-2018 06:35 PM
โJan-02-2018 04:47 PM
โJan-02-2018 04:08 PM
โJan-02-2018 02:34 PM
โJan-02-2018 02:21 PM