Sectorsteve said..MichaelR said...
Excellent day out Steve.
Regarding your charging. Yes, you can overcharge and kill a battery. However, a normal car or bike alternator will charge at roughly 13.8 volts at any speed above idle. The outboard you have will have a built in voltage regulator, this regulator gets the voltage load back from the charge cables and regulates how much charge the alternator sends back to the battery. At least, that's the layman's explanation.
If your regulator wasn't working, your voltmeter would show a much higher voltage than 14, which is still fine.
Thanks michael. So are you saying that theres a kind of safety system in there somewhere? What about from the panel? Im all paranoid now since frying the last battery (left inverter on) so im disconnecting the solar panel when i leave the boat.
Steve, all battery charging systems from engines will have a voltage regulator. Alternators, or stators as some call them are simple power generators that generate a power curve depending on their revolution speed, if there was no regulator, the voltage would increase to many hundreds of volts. The regulator/rectifier is in place to regulate the voltage your battery and engine receives from the alternator/stator to roughly 14 volts. This is the voltage required to continually charge a 12 volt battery.
Using your panel will only show you some of the story and is only good for on the go monitoring, but if you are showing 14 volts its a good thing. If it was off the dial, then the regulator in the outboard has failed and would need attention. If it's showing lower than 12 fully loaded with fridge and lights, then it's also going to need attention.
From what you've explained so far, it seems like you have nothing to worry about with your engine overcharging.
With your solar, you will need to get a multi-meter and check how much power it's generating in full sun. You can google the method for this, because there are a couple of things to look out for. Here is the first hit I got.
www.selectsolar.co.uk/cat/171/testing-your-solar-panel-regulatorHave fun, and thanks for making me think about my aging solar panels :-)