Hey everyone,
I have a strange issue that's happened to me the last few trips out. A little background, I have 2 batteries with a 1/2/combine switch, and an ACR charging isolator. I have a starter battery and a deep cycle house battery, both of which are new. The house battery circuit, which I have the ballast pumps, radio, and dash switches connected to has intermittently stopped working on me. It's been when I've had all 3 pumps and a few other things running. Everything coming from the house battery goes completely dead. If I combine batteries it all works fine. The strange part is if I wait a while, the house battery circuit comes back to life. So clearly it is not a blown fuse, and I know for a fact that the pumps are wired directly to the house battery side of the switch because I wired it, so it's obviously not a relay either. The dash switches and radio are all on their original wiring but also wired directly to the house battery through their own wire separate from the pumps. But when the issue happens, everything loses power together and then randomly it comes back. So whatever's going on is happening somewhere between the house battery and the switch, and the only things there are an 80 amp block fuse which is not blown and the wires themselves.
What on earth could cause intermittent loss of power from one battery, at times when I'm putting a heavy load on the battery? Bad ground crossed my mind, but it possible for a ground to be "just bad enough" to only cause a problem when the battery is heavily loaded?
I have a strange issue that's happened to me the last few trips out. A little background, I have 2 batteries with a 1/2/combine switch, and an ACR charging isolator. I have a starter battery and a deep cycle house battery, both of which are new. The house battery circuit, which I have the ballast pumps, radio, and dash switches connected to has intermittently stopped working on me. It's been when I've had all 3 pumps and a few other things running. Everything coming from the house battery goes completely dead. If I combine batteries it all works fine. The strange part is if I wait a while, the house battery circuit comes back to life. So clearly it is not a blown fuse, and I know for a fact that the pumps are wired directly to the house battery side of the switch because I wired it, so it's obviously not a relay either. The dash switches and radio are all on their original wiring but also wired directly to the house battery through their own wire separate from the pumps. But when the issue happens, everything loses power together and then randomly it comes back. So whatever's going on is happening somewhere between the house battery and the switch, and the only things there are an 80 amp block fuse which is not blown and the wires themselves.
What on earth could cause intermittent loss of power from one battery, at times when I'm putting a heavy load on the battery? Bad ground crossed my mind, but it possible for a ground to be "just bad enough" to only cause a problem when the battery is heavily loaded?
Comment