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Post Info TOPIC: Battery Chargers


Senior Member

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Battery Chargers


I am hoping someone could please fill me in on battery chargers? In my slide on camper I have an Eletro 12 d.c 15 amp battery charger. I am wondering if anyone has had any experience with this type of charger? It doesn't really give me any info to tell me if it is fully charged! So far it hasn't caused me any issues but being a  newbie to this, I really am not sure if this is adequate for my needs or could I do better elsewhere? I don't have solar but I do have a genny. Please forgive me if I'm being a little vague! When it comes to this really......I am!!



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I have had an electro 20 amp charger for some years and have found it to be an excellent unit. To help you with your problems could you give us the model number of your charger. If it is the smaller version of mine you will find on the front and also on the top of the case a series of lights corresponding to the state of charging. Red for bulk charge orange for absorption stage and gree for the float stage also a green light to indicate power on.

Alan



-- Edited by Brenda and Alan on Sunday 11th of December 2016 08:03:07 PM

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Sounds like it must be the smaller version of yours B & A. Mine does have all that on the front! How can I tell if it is fully charged?

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HunnyBunny wrote:

Sounds like it must be the smaller version of yours B & A. Mine does have all that on the front! How can I tell if it is fully charged?





You should have 2 green lights showing.

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Bill B


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The "Float" green light means that the charger has finished charging and is now holding the battery voltage at a level that will simply maintain it in a fully charged state until you start using the power stored in the battery.
If the charger is off, and you use some of the battery's power, when you next turn the charger on it will usually start in "Bulk" mode (shoving plenty of power back into the battery) then when it gets to a certain level, it switches to "Absorption"mode which tapers off the charging rate until it gets to fully charged, and it then switches to "Float" mode.
If you haven't used much power from the battery, the charger may jump quickly through "Bulk" to "Absorption" and you may not even see the red light come on.
My charger also has a small fan that comes on if the unit is getting hot, as it may do on a hot day.
Hope that helps,
Cheers

C00P

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Buy a Multimeter too.
It can do a lot more than tell you each battery voltage.

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Brenda and Alan wrote:

 also on the top of the case a series of lights corresponding to the state of charging. Red for bulk charge orange for absorption stage and green for the float stage


 Those lights tell you most of what you need to know. Read this page. It explains the various stages of battery charging cycle encountered with a multi stage charger. I you  have an AGM or GEL battery ignore the equalisation stage as it should only be used on flooded batteries.

Basically, when you switch the charger on it will start in the "bulk" stage. If your battery is flat this stage supplies most of (the bulk) of your battery charging. The charger then goes into the "absorption" stage. This finishes the charging with a lower current and allows the battery to settle down. When the charging is finished the charger switches to the "float" stage. This maintains the battery so it does not self discharge. Your charger will go through the stages of lights indication which stage the charger is operation in. When it gets to just the green light on the charger has finished charging, leave it switched on to maintain the battery.



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PeterD
Nissan Navara D23 diesel auto, Spaceland pop-top
Retired radio and electronics technician.
NSW Central Coast.

 



Senior Member

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Thank you all for your much appreciated answers to my query. This has helped me a lot. :)

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