Shift the PAS reservoir. Make a steel flat bracket bolted to the support panel and bent slightly towards the engine. Then fit a full size battery, plenty of choices.
I bought a new fridge and decided to give it a test run in the back of the Disco. It ran for 2 hours before stopping for what appears to be low voltage.The fridge compressor tries to start...I can hear it start spinning up but then cuts out as soon as it gets going. Multi-meter shows a pretty significant voltage drop. The aux battery is fully charged and reads 12.4V open circuit. It came with the vehicle when I bought it about 2-3 years ago, so I'm assuming it's life is coming to an end...
I figure I'll go to a battery place later this week and they can perform a proper load test, but I think I know where this is headed.... Asking Santa for a battery for xmas!
Any recommendations for a deep cycle? I would like to get over 100AH* if I can, however the aux battery space seems limited - PAS reservoir is in the way. I can't see how I can fit one that's longer than 270mm. For that size I can't find any past about 80AH. (Current one installed is 80AH). Any particular types/brands might fit my size and capacity requirements better than others??
*20 hr spec for those who want to get technical.
Shift the PAS reservoir. Make a steel flat bracket bolted to the support panel and bent slightly towards the engine. Then fit a full size battery, plenty of choices.
If you are getting significant voltage drop to the back of the disco you need to address the wiring from aux to fridge. Either 8 or 6 b&s wire will be enough for fridge alone. With correctly sized cable you should see only 0.1 or 0.2 volts drop.
Voltage drop under load at the battery terminals does suggest a dead battery however.
Traxide battery isolators are a pretty good way to get around battery size limitations, especially with a deep cycle/ cranking dual purpose battery for the starting battery.
P.S. 8 or 6 b&s wire = american wire gauge? I'll have to check, but that sounds pretty big. I doubt what is installed is that thick.
B&S is pretty much the same as AWG.
You probably have a combination of tired battery and undersized wiring.
You need to factor in both positive and negative runs for total wiring length when calculating voltage drop. Providing you have solid power connections between battery and fridge a 10M run of 8b&s would drop 0.16V at 6amps. Typical "4mm" auto electrical wiring might only be 2mm^2 or 14 gauge or less so on the same 10M run you'd see a 0.5V drop at 6 amps.
I'd also be checking the wiring to make sure you haven't got any marginal connections between battery and fridge. 1V drop seems huge for wiring alone - sure it's not a 15amp draw?
cheers
Paul
OK, just got home so can clarify a few things.
According to the fridge manual, it cuts out at 10.8V and will only cut back in at 12.6V. (The "cut back" part sounds odd to me, but anyway).
From running the fridge through a 240V power pack and a watt meter on the DC lead, it draws about 4A.
The wiring to the rear socket has 16AWG stamped on it.
The fridge power lead also has 16AWG stamped on it! It's about a metre long.
So to summarise, yesterday I thought I was ready for my upcoming xmas camping trip.
In actual fact, I need to relocate my PAS reservoir, buy a new battery and re-run the wiring in a higher gauge.
How am I doing?![]()
The 10.8v is obviously a load voltage - when the fridge cuts out the battery will have a bit of a rest and the no load voltage will rise. If the cut back in voltage was 10.8v the fridge would start back up again but only for a short period so draining the battery further.
By having the the 12.6v cut in voltage this means that the battery has to be recharged (at least partially) before the fridge can be used again.
Garry
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
It will come back on when you run the motor as you should get well above 13V.
16 gauge is way too skinny. At 4 amp you'll be dropping at least 0.5V even if everything else is spot on. Going to 8b&s for the same run will reduce the drop to under 0.1V. When you consider that drop means you are losing the equivalent of 20-30% of your system capacity because the fridge cut off kicks in early, it's worth sorting. The twin sheath stuff Traxide sells is pretty good and makes for a neat install. I'm sure you can source similar products from other vendors too.
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