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Can you link to the FB page - from that photo I can't actually see the shunt?From FB - Aryn Abramowitch:
Added a victron shunt to monitor the AUX battery current and state of charge (no idea why there isn’t a shunt from factory!). The shunt fits perfectly onto the threaded bolts under the seat! It’s like they were put there exactly for this
Try this:Can you link to the FB page - from that photo I can't actually see the shunt?
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And then I got a phone call, "please can you come to the port of Antwerp?". I said yes. That's almost 90 km one way, one hour drive, mostly motorway, speed mostly between 90km/h and 127 km/h.
Battery at start was about 12.37 Volt "60%". (See the data higher up this thread).
At midnight my battery voltage was 12.8 Volt:
And today at 18h30 it was still 12.68 Volt:
The Auxiliary battery showed
According to my car infoscreen
- at midnight 12.86 Volt
- at 18h30 (today, therefore after 18h30) 12.74 Volt
- a peak while driving at 14.98 Volt
- the rest of the pattern was quite similar to the main battery.
- state of charge was about 60% before going to Antwerp
- 84% when back home at 22h30 and 12.7 volt with the key in the ignition (motor off)
Or you have a very good memory or you use the search function in a very efficient manner
IActually neither
had one in my hands the other day. It's a chunky monkey.
Thanks.
Good to actually see what's going on.The Auxiliary battery showed
- at midnight 12.86 Volt
- at 18h30 (today, therefore after 18h30) 12.74 Volt
- a peak while driving at 14.98 Volt
- the rest of the pattern was quite similar to the main battery.
Yes, this was almost the same as the main battery, no significant difference.Did you note the aux voltage or percentage before the drive?
@DCPU I made exactly thisThanks.
This looks the place he's talking about, right by the grommet that has a habit of falling out and is difficult to retrieve:
View attachment 7824638
I plugged my 40 litre engel into the rear 12v plug and camped in the recent crazy hot weather and the battery readout went from 96%to 78% in a couple of days and recharged fully on the way home a couple of hour drive. We are going to Spain for 6 weeks soon so will have a better idea I I need to make changes after that.The whole reason i went with the auxillary battery was to use it to power my fridge and camp lighting etc. Bit of a shame i can't use it for that purpose but perhaps there will be a work around in the future
froggy, i am pretty impressed with that result. I have a Bushman fridge and we are about to head off for a couple of weeks to Carnarvon Gorge. It's good to know how your engel went.I plugged my 40 litre engel into the rear 12v plug and camped in the recent crazy hot weather and the battery readout went from 96%to 78% in a couple of days and recharged fully on the way home a couple of hour drive. We are going to Spain for 6 weeks soon so will have a better idea I I need to make changes after that.
Awesome spot - one of my all time favourite places. Are you doing the great walk or just spending time up the gorge? Mt Moffatt, Kaka Mundi and Salvator Rosa are also worth a visit.froggy, i am pretty impressed with that result. I have a Bushman fridge and we are about to head off for a couple of weeks to Carnarvon Gorge. It's good to know how your engel went.
Also one of my favoritesAwesome spot - one of my all time favourite places. Are you doing the great walk or just spending time up the gorge? Mt Moffatt, Kaka Mundi and Salvator Rosa are also worth a visit.
We are spending a couple of days there and doing a few of the Gorge walks like the Moss Garden, Wards Canyon and the Ampitheatre. Looking forward to it and will check out the places you recommended.Awesome spot - one of my all time favourite places. Are you doing the great walk or just spending time up the gorge? Mt Moffatt, Kaka Mundi and Salvator Rosa are also worth a visit.
Neither of the others are as spectacular but a more remote. Depending on where you are coming from / going to they may or may not suit but I love them for their remoteness. I’ve been fortunate to walk the gorge from Mt Moffatt down to the Carnarvon campsite along the river over a few days and that was amazing.We are spending a couple of days there and doing a few of the Gorge walks like the Moss Garden, Wards Canyon and the Ampitheatre. Looking forward to it and will check out the places you recommended.
And maybe a third time as I had a factual error in it. Is corrected now and error is left visible to document what was wrong.I'm going to have to read that again, slowly...
I only see this post and your interesting conclusion now.As you know, I have some doubts about the SoC% readings of the China monitors. The reason is that they are only an interpretation of the voltage and not a calculation based on the charged/discharged currents and time of a battery.
@Lollo050968 kindly made his long-term recordings available to me and I made a graph out of them that seems to confirm my suspicion.
You see a rendering of around 11'000 value pairs. As it is an x/y plot, and the resolution of the voltage is only 0.01V, we have anyway only 12.30 to 14.95 values and thus coordinates which yield 265 line segments in the end - some of them actually being plotted twice on the same area.
The chart is not a timeline visualization but an x/y plot to fit all recorded voltage/SoC% tuples into a fixed grid. So it shows which percent values were shown at a particular voltage.
View attachment 7825708
You see that the same voltage is interpreted as different SoC percentages. It would take some arithmetic algorithms to filter thecharging/dischargingdifferenceshigh/low values out from the results and to calculate the averages - which I have done and describe in the following.
Such a diagram doesn't tell you the real problem as the amount of data and the continuous line in this x,y plot is misleading. Therefore, I have reformatted the input to a format which contains high, low and average in one single line for each distinct voltage value in the 11k records . For what I got from @Lollo050968 this finally boils down to 168 distinct voltages.
The diagram below shows the errors and the resulting averages which were calculated from all SoC% values for each voltage seen in the dataset.
Apparently there a some spikes which you should simply ignore.
View attachment 7825733
As you can see, there are values without an error indication. These values actually have only one single record in the data set, so no error can be calculated. Also interesting is that there are many readings in the 12.5V to 13.2V range and also some in the 14.1 to 14.2V range but only a few in the other ranges.
Remember that this chart does not visualize the voltages but the SoC% values of the monitor.
While I'm tempted to interpret the results, I'll leave that to you for now, as I'm not sure I'm competent to do so.
factual correction
added text in italics