DaveM
Explorer
Been having charging issues with my Interstate SRM-24 deep cycle batt that I thought meant the batt was bad (battery seems to discharge quickly even when not in use). Had Interstate load test it overnight and it seems ok. Now I'm thinking the issue is a combination of my charging and monitoring equipment, and my knowledge. So looking for some very basic help and info on how to properly charge, maintain, and check my deep cycle battery...
Battery - Interstate SRM-24, flooded, 81Ah, 1 year old.
Typically I charge the battery at home on a NOCO Genius charger to 100%, then let it sit in the trailer hooked up to the fuse box but disconnected via marine disconnect switch. I check it periodically and plug it back in to charge anytime the battery shows below 85% on the little batt box meter (this seems to be happening faster then it should when not in use).
Questions:
At home charging - I use a NOCO Genius 3500 (3.5 amp) charger.
Is 3.5 amps enough for charging this battery? I have read 2-3 amps is ok (just slow), have also read it should be 10 amps to get a true full charge on deep cycle batts. Otherwise I'll get a surface charge that looks like its 100% but fades quickly.
The Genius 3500 supposedly has a "maintenance" mode and can be hooked up continuously. Should I be doing this w my batt or disconnecting once fully charged as I have been?
Battery monitoring - I usually rely on the percent charged feedback from a small cheap gauge installed on the batt box when out camping. It seems to be unreliable (shocker). Is there a better way to monitor state of charge when out camping and charging off the panels, beside bringing my multimeter with me?
When I do use my multimeter my understanding is 12.7 is 100%, 12.5 is about 80%, and 12.2 is about 50%. I should not let the battery discharge more than about 50%? But I seem to hit 60% very quickly in the field (at least based on the cheap gauge).
Battery - Interstate SRM-24, flooded, 81Ah, 1 year old.
Typically I charge the battery at home on a NOCO Genius charger to 100%, then let it sit in the trailer hooked up to the fuse box but disconnected via marine disconnect switch. I check it periodically and plug it back in to charge anytime the battery shows below 85% on the little batt box meter (this seems to be happening faster then it should when not in use).
Questions:
At home charging - I use a NOCO Genius 3500 (3.5 amp) charger.
Is 3.5 amps enough for charging this battery? I have read 2-3 amps is ok (just slow), have also read it should be 10 amps to get a true full charge on deep cycle batts. Otherwise I'll get a surface charge that looks like its 100% but fades quickly.
The Genius 3500 supposedly has a "maintenance" mode and can be hooked up continuously. Should I be doing this w my batt or disconnecting once fully charged as I have been?
Battery monitoring - I usually rely on the percent charged feedback from a small cheap gauge installed on the batt box when out camping. It seems to be unreliable (shocker). Is there a better way to monitor state of charge when out camping and charging off the panels, beside bringing my multimeter with me?
When I do use my multimeter my understanding is 12.7 is 100%, 12.5 is about 80%, and 12.2 is about 50%. I should not let the battery discharge more than about 50%? But I seem to hit 60% very quickly in the field (at least based on the cheap gauge).