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Batteries go dead almost over night
I am loosing my mind. I tend to be very good at tracking this kind of stuff down being in the 12 volt industry for 10 years. I can test draw on the batteries with the battery switch in the off position and I get zero draw unless the bilge pump comes on. I have the Mercathode fuses open currently. I had the boat running three weeks ago and came up the next weekend to find dead batteries. I had a heck of a time getting them to take a charge. I finally got them to charge up using some one elses charger so I figured my charger was bad. I went down to the boat to run it this AM after using the boat all yesterday and it barely started. Ran it for a bit and it started up fine. I do not have my load tester to check the batteries (they are brand new) but does this sound like it could be a Mercathode issue? I want to leave the boat in the water but not at the risk of the batteries going down and the bilge pump not working!
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could be a dead cell in the battery itself...yank off the covers and test each cell...
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Originally Posted by Audiofn
(Post 2872731)
I am loosing my mind. I tend to be very good at tracking this kind of stuff down being in the 12 volt industry for 10 years. I can test draw on the batteries with the battery switch in the off position and I get zero draw unless the bilge pump comes on. I have the Mercathode fuses open currently. I had the boat running three weeks ago and came up the next weekend to find dead batteries. I had a heck of a time getting them to take a charge. I finally got them to charge up using some one elses charger so I figured my charger was bad. I went down to the boat to run it this AM after using the boat all yesterday and it barely started. Ran it for a bit and it started up fine. I do not have my load tester to check the batteries (they are brand new) but does this sound like it could be a Mercathode issue? I want to leave the boat in the water but not at the risk of the batteries going down and the bilge pump not working!
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a bad rectifier in the alternator will drain the battery over nite. disconnect the alt wiring and see if your voltage draw drops dramatically
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If they had a hard time taking charge,,,DEAD CELL !!!
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Originally Posted by 1fastlx
(Post 2873443)
a bad rectifier in the alternator will drain the battery over nite. disconnect the alt wiring and see if your voltage draw drops dramatically
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Originally Posted by Audiofn
(Post 2873487)
Would this still be the case wit the battery switches off? I also see no draw when I have the battery switch off. Could one bad battery draw down the other? I assume so but over night?
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Originally Posted by Audiofn
(Post 2873487)
Would this still be the case wit the battery switches off? I also see no draw when I have the battery switch off. Could one bad battery draw down the other? I assume so but over night?
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with my race car, ive had batts die over night, scratch my head, test for draw etc etc. and each time it was a bad cell.
put a new batt in and i was good. one time i put the car down from a wheelie hard next run, batt deal. it broke a cell inside, we cut it apart and found it. seems like a bad batt even tho its pretty new. allot of batts cant take much pain from wheelies, or waves, and it shocks them, brakes them etc. |
Originally Posted by noyzee
(Post 2873579)
with my race car, ive had batts die over night, scratch my head, test for draw etc etc. and each time it was a bad cell.
put a new batt in and i was good. one time i put the car down from a wheelie hard next run, batt deal. it broke a cell inside, we cut it apart and found it. seems like a bad batt even tho its pretty new. allot of batts cant take much pain from wheelies, or waves, and it shocks them, brakes them etc. + they have a full warrantie of 1 year !:evilb::grinser010: |
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