...Again, as the battery reaches full charge, amperage drops, voltage drop goes down, and the battery will see the full 13.5-14V.
Exactly. The problem though, is that 13.5v-14v might not fully charge the battery.
Looking at the Trojan battery manual:
http://www.trojanbattery.com/Tech-Support/documents/UsersGuide_0708_English_003.pdf
On page 12 is where the charge profiles start. The first one - for a regular flooded battery - shows that 2.35v per cell is roughly 90% charged. So 2.35v x 6 cells = 14.1v.
To be fully charged, the battery voltage has to be pushed up to between 2.45v - 2.7v per cell, which works out to between 14.7v - 16.2v.
13.5v / 6 = 2.25v which looks to be somewhere down around 70-80% charged.
So yea, getting the battery up to 14v ain't bad. Holding it there for some hours will even drive the battery up to 95% eventually. (Which begs the question: Will the truck's voltage regulator hold it there? For how long?)
The Gel and AGM profiles are a bit different from the flooded, but similar to each other. Get them up to a certain voltage and hold them there long enough and they'll eventually reach 100% charge.
For the AGM that's between 14.1v - 14.7v.
So again, if the charging rig can get the battery to 14v and hold it there long enough the battery will get pretty close to full.
Still not completely full though. :ylsmoke:
The risk here, in hooking up the trailer battery with 4ga, is what happens if the main battery is very low. Even at 100Amps charge rate, the voltage drop is only 0.5V. The 7 pin connector can't handle 100A, and it won't be good for a flooded lead acid battery.
That's pretty much a non-issue because the vehicle charging system is not a constant current type charging system. It's a constant voltage system, so all it will do is supply however many amps are needed to hold the voltage. How many amps the battery draws will depend on the battery's internal resistance, and whatever the charge voltage is at the battery. If all it can absorb is 10a @ 14v, then that's all that will flow.
The battery won't be getting slammed with the max output of the alternator (unless it's an Optima or Concorde which have radically low internal resistance). If the battery is only drawing 10a than that's all that is needed to hold the bus voltage up so that's all the alternator will put out. As the battery charges, and the internal resistance drops then the amp flow will go up, but it'll be a gradual ramp up.
Bigger wire will not hurt the battery - a normal battery on a constant voltage charger will draw only as much as it can absorb.
And any battery with a low enough resistance to actually draw 100a from a constant voltage charging system will be able to handle 100a charge rate.
But yea, big wire will be too big for a 7-pin connector.
I don't think we disagree... I'm just being more cautious with the advice, and how fast I want to charge my battery, and how much complexity I want.
Yea, we're pretty much on the same page except for deliberately dropping the voltage with a smaller wire. I don't agree that it protects the battery.
My camper van has two batteries under the hood - one for engine and one for aux. They are connected with nice fat battery cables to a split-charge relay. When the engine is running they are tied into a single bank and the aux battery is allowed to absorb all it can. There is no need to limit the amperage because the battery's internal resistance does that.
If it doesn't hurt the aux battery to use a normal battery cable when it's under the hood - why would it hurt to use a normal battery cable if the battery happens to be in a trailer?
There is also an old 12.8v 10a Shumacher battery charger hard wired to the aux battery. It's a constant voltage charger. When the battery is dead and I hook up that charger, the battery will absorb 1a or less for quite a while before the amperage starts to rise. Eventually the amperage will rise and as the battery gets full, the amperage once again drops. Normal constant voltage charge behavior.
But here's the thing, that charger can put out up to 10a, but only at 12.8v constant. I've never seen that battery absorb more than 6a peak from that charger. So that's the limit. That battery simply cannot absorb more than 6a if the supply voltage is 12.8v.
It doesn't matter if I were to hook up a 100a charger using 1/0 wire - at 12.8v the battery still won't draw more than 6a. And when the battery is really low, it won't even allow 1a to flow through it at that voltage.*
Of course, with the engine running and supplying 14.6v, then more amps will flow - but still the battery sets the limit.
With a constant voltage charger, there is no seed to set any limit other than the maximum voltage - the battery will limit the amps by its own internal resistance, so why deliberately choke it off even further? Better to let it have all it wants.
*(Also, at 12.8v that charger never does get my aux battery completely full. That only happens when I drive the truck on the highway all day. I really should buy a proper converter/charger...but it woks, so why fix it? Like I said, I beat up my aux battery; I run it way below 50%, every now and then I run it pretty much dead, it usually only gets partially recharged most of the time. That's why I buy a cheap battery. It is a real deep cycle battery though, not a rv/marine so it can take the abuse for somewhat longer before I have to scrap it.)