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Home > General > What voltage does yours charge at? |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
The voltage at the battery is actually very material - intelligent charging systems don't just make up voltages and they will always work within the limits that the battery chemistry permits - when they cannot stay within those parameters to keep the battery charged, they will throw a "battery dead" message. I don't think most FL2 are that sophisticated, but my 5 series is. So you have to pay BMW to reset your computer if you change the battery as it learns the character of your battery over time. So how does this work? In addition to monitoring the battery voltage, they have a small resistor in line with the ground terminal. They use that to measure the current drain and charge from and into the battery. In a theoretical 100AH battery it would draw 10A for 5 hours to charge from 50% to 100%. In reality it is nothing like that - it is not linear for a start. The cars computer integrates the total charge and drain over time to get an accurate computation of the state of charge of the battery. So it knows when to charge and when to stop charging. The volts measured will also be used. Incidentally, this is why you should put your battery charger the right side of this small resistor rather than direct on the terminals if you have a BMW at least - they it knows what charge has been added to the battery. Otherwise you are adding charge "blind". So connect where the maker recommends you connect - it is for a reason these days. Good old days, bang on the battery was best, and still is for many cars. A Clipper BM-1 Battery Monitor will do this for your marine or caravan battery if you want - I love the idea of one of these, but unless you have to rely heavily on your battery for your life (like you might in a yacht to keep the radio and navigation live) I cannot see the need to worry to this degree. |
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18th Oct 2017 11:37 am |
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Bill Turner Member Since: 08 Jul 2008 Location: Birkenhead Posts: 977 |
Hi Nick, Yes there is, details of which are shown in the Caravan Chronicles blog link given in my first post. Problem is that it costs some £300+ Bill Life Honorary Member of Wallasey Motor Club. Licenced MSA Radio Operator for 35+ years. Rallying is the only sport. |
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18th Oct 2017 1:14 pm |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1689 |
The Freelander does have intelligent charging with a smart alternator there was a problem with it charging caravan batteries in its early days and LR modified the charging circuit to overcome this problem.
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18th Oct 2017 1:48 pm |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
"The voltage can be anything, Wattless volts never hurt anything it's volts with current that causes problems or in other words power, you can't have current without volts but you can have volts without current"
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18th Oct 2017 2:09 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4907 |
My clamp meter showed after 20 seconds the alternator had increased to & settled at an 80amp charge. Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
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18th Oct 2017 10:25 pm |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
That's a lot of amps ! Hence why a car should charge when being used.
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19th Oct 2017 3:25 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4907 |
To stop things rattling & sliding. I have only done the front pockets.
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19th Oct 2017 8:04 pm |
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TXFireblade Member Since: 30 Apr 2013 Location: Houston Posts: 43 |
My 3.2 charging voltage varies considerably depending (I guess) on the state of the battery. It can go as high is 14 V and as low as 13.2V. I believe the 3.2 use a smart charging system so traditional plug in battery monitors aren't really that useful. The one I have shows voltage and has led's to indicate the state of the battery and any charging system faults. Last night during a longish drive the voltmeter showed 13.23V and was indicating a possible charging problem however the voltage remained within 0.1V regardless of the electrical load (lights, heated front and rear screen, heated seats, etc.). This used to stress me out but now I just accept it since the car always starts fine, despite doing lots of very short trips. |
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20th Oct 2017 1:43 pm |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
Really interesting that you should post this, because it matches my update.
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24th Oct 2017 9:24 am |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
Gets more interesting. We do have brake regen. When decelerating, battery charges at 14.7. While on throttle, floats 12 to 13, unless electrical load high, then 13.8 or 14.4. |
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24th Oct 2017 2:28 pm |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1689 |
Technically that is not brake regen, brake regen is when the charging load is such that the alternator/generator retards the vehicle and not the brakes, on the Freelander2 both auto and manual gearbox braking turns the engine which is software set to charge the battery. You can only achieve brake regen on a hybrid vehicle where any retardation uses the electric motor as a generator to achieve a longer electric capability. OK that's picking holes, but the Freelander does have a fairly sophisticated charging system to help it's emission ratings which lowers the VED, green I'm not but saving cash is a hobby though not an OCD one my PC is slightly to the right of Genghis
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24th Oct 2017 4:07 pm |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
PEDANT ALERT - proceed at your own risk.
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24th Oct 2017 4:37 pm |
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DirtyDuck Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Wessex Posts: 192 |
LOL - I put PENDANT alert the first time !! |
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24th Oct 2017 4:38 pm |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1689 |
We could just get 40mpg on a trip from Scotland to Dover, but apart from a just fill and reset it dropped back to about 37mpg average, strangely out here it will easily get to 40-42 on the 50-60Km trip to the airports, warm weather and a quick up to temperature time may be the reason, Except in town there is no need to do much braking, not much traffic and very low speed limits, the police can be extremely lax or strict depending on your actual speed, the higher over the limit the more revenue collected therefore bonuses and promotion are the incentive my PC is slightly to the right of Genghis
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24th Oct 2017 6:09 pm |
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