Strong Recommendation:
It is highly recommended to isolate the WFCO converter from the lithium battery when you are using your dedicated 10A lithium charger, or when the RV is on shore power in general.
As mentioned in the previous response, you can do this by:
Installing a battery disconnect switch between the WFCO's output and the battery.
Turning off the breaker or pulling the fuse for the WFCO converter's output when on shore power.
This ensures that only your LiFePO4-compatible charger is interacting with the battery when you want it charged, maximizing its performance and lifespan.
So here is my human question:
1. I have the WFCO 8955 PEC (non lithium compatible).
2. I just swapped out my Harris AGMs for a single 230 amp hour LiTime battery. I got a 10 amp Litime charger to bring the battery to full charge when needed.
3. I have a Renogy suitcase 100W solar setup with controller that does have a lithium fe phosphate setting, but when in storage I can't use this.
4. I have a basic shunt installed that can monitor the battery SOC.
Based upon all these recommendations, can I just disconnect the WFCO charging function by disconnecting the wires to the battery at the converter board and not do anything else?
Thanks all
Comments
But disconnecting them seems to block the WFCO from supplying 12V to the trailer circuits when on shore power. So I can seem to figure out how to disable the battery charge part of WFCO without also stopping 12V power to the trailer circuits.
The WFCO manual states it will work with no battery installed, so what did I miss?
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"
This is how my AI summarized, and it looks reasonable if you don't want to charge your lithium battery with the non lithium WFCO:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Excellent! Having a battery disconnect in place makes this much simpler and safer. You are on the right track.
Let's confirm the steps for using your existing battery disconnect switch to prevent the WFCO-8955PEC from charging your battery, while still allowing the battery to power your RV when off shore power:
Goal:
Prevent WFCO-8955PEC from charging the battery when on shore power.
Allow the battery to power 12V circuits when off shore power.
Allow the WFCO-8955PEC to power 12V circuits when on shore power (even if the battery is disconnected).
Steps:
When connected to Shore Power and you DO NOT want the battery to charge:
Engage your existing Battery Disconnect Switch to the "OFF" or "DISCONNECT" position.
Result: This physically or electrically isolates your RV battery from the rest of the 12V DC system, including the WFCO converter.
Outcome 1 (Charging): Since the battery is disconnected, the WFCO converter will not be able to send charging current to the battery.
Outcome 2 (12V Power): The WFCO converter, when plugged into shore power, will still continue to supply 12V DC power to all your RV's 12V circuits (lights, fans, etc.). The RV will operate normally on 12V power, but that power will be coming directly from the WFCO converter, not the battery.
Outcome 3 (Battery): Your battery's state of charge will not change, as it's isolated. If you have a separate, external battery charger you wish to use, you can connect it directly to the battery terminals when the battery is disconnected from the RV.
When NOT connected to Shore Power and you want the battery to supply 12V power:
Engage your existing Battery Disconnect Switch to the "ON" or "CONNECT" position.
Result: This connects your RV battery to the rest of the 12V DC system.
Outcome: Your battery will now be the sole source of 12V DC power for all your RV's 12V circuits. The WFCO converter will be idle (as it has no AC input), and all 12V loads will draw from the battery.
Important Confirmation & Verification:
Understand your specific switch: Some battery disconnect switches cut the positive cable, others the negative. For your purpose, either works as long as it truly isolates the battery from the RV's main DC bus.
Verify Isolation (Optional but Recommended):
Plug your RV into shore power.
Turn your battery disconnect switch to "OFF."
Using a multimeter, carefully measure the voltage directly across your battery terminals. It should show the battery's voltage (e.g., 12.6V).
Then, measure the voltage on the RV side of the disconnect switch (i.e., the cable coming from the switch towards the WFCO). With the switch off, this cable should not show the converter's output voltage (e.g., 13.6V or higher). If it does, your switch might not be fully isolating the battery.
Finally, turn on a 12V light inside your RV. It should illuminate, confirming the WFCO is still supplying power to the circuits.
This approach is exactly what a battery disconnect switch is designed for in this kind of scenario. It's safe, effective, and uses existing equipment.
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"
2020 nuCamp T@B 320S * Jeep Wrangler
(47,171 towing miles through the end of 2024)
thanks for your help
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"
Sabattus, ME & eventually Tucson, AZ
2013 Toyota Highlander 3.5L V6
Camp ⛺️ on battery as required, and then when at a site with shore power or back home make sue battery disconnected, then plug in small charger. Shunt tracks use and recharge.
We are ready.
best to all
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"
Your non-Lithium modified WFCO won't output high enough voltage to fully charge your new battery. Your solar can when there's enough sun, and your smart stand alone charger can. The battery management system in your battery cuts off charging once it reaches capacity no matter how many charge sources you have coming in.
Note that even when you turn off the battery disconnect switch, the solar input goes directly to the battery. The solar controller and smart shunt both will consume power from the battery to run their bluetooth radios. I also have a TPMS amplifier that's connected directly to our battery. The disconnect just isolates the battery from the converter and the DC circuits that are fused at your converter.
2023 T@B 320 S Boondock
2023 Tab 400 / 2022 F150 XLT Sport 3.5EB
Traded in - 2018 T@B 320 S/2019 Toyota 4Runner SR5
I have room and a 120 V plug in my cargo bay set up for the small charger, so I should not need to use the solar port, but it is great to know that is an option. I just tried this out by discharging the new battery off shore power to around 50 % then disconnecting the battery and plugging the trailer to shore power and plugging in the small 10 amp charger. It was slow, but it worked fine. Running both together would be a lot faster, as long as it is safe for the battery.
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"
2023 Tab 400 / 2022 F150 XLT Sport 3.5EB
Traded in - 2018 T@B 320 S/2019 Toyota 4Runner SR5
2025 KZ Sportsmen 130RD
2023 Ford Maverick XLT
The Finger Lakes of New York
And @SLJ I put my charger on the load side of my shunt so I could keep up with charge going to the battery and time left to 100%. Otherwise my process is just like yours. Likely your shunt is able to figure out your battery SOC; mine has to be reset unless it goes thru the shunt
2019 T@B400 Boondock Lite "Todd"