@sbhtennis - In my experience, with two 6 volt batteries, you really need a good external smart charger (Deltran Battery Tender Plus, Pro-Logix, Noco Genius, etc.). The onboard converter just would not charge my dual 6 volt batteries well at all - it's voltage output is on the low side. Measuring charge by voltage is not…
Using two 6 volt golf cart batteries wired in series sounds great at first... especially offering 235 amp hours of power. But there are issues... First we do not have the Outback edition and the plastic tub is too small to hold 2 batteries without extensive modifications. I cut out a cardboard template of 2 batteries and…
No, each 6VDC battery is the 224 amp hr rating, in series you add voltage, so two 6 VDC is 12 volts, amps stay the same. To increase amps, you wire two 12 volt batteries in parallel. So two 12 VDC batteries at 150 amps each wired in parallel will give you 300 amps at 12 volts. cheers
Here is a nice little etrailer tutorial on solar and batteries. https://www.etrailer.com/faq-how-much-solar-power-rv.aspx It sounds like you want to double your battery capacity, but I would not recommend the large 12 volt battery (history of premature failure and nuCamp is no longer installing them). I would add two 6…
The Group 24 batteries that I have are 6 1/2 x 10. The tray that it sits in is 7 3/4 x 11, so maybe a larger battery would fit in the tray, with some creativity you could go bigger or put two 6 volt batteries in there.
I know this one's been beaten up some here on the forum but would like some feedback and recommendations here with the coming of winter and the storing of trailers. I'm aware of the WFCO discussion and the potential for less than adequate charge rates and declining battery life therein. I'm wondering how any of you…
I had 2-6 volt batteries installed inside my tub. I understand that almost triples the capacity of a 24 volt battery but I don't know how it compares to a 27. I would post a shot but I don't know how to re-size pics
Before I got the Tab 400 and my F150 I would carry the 100 watt panel on roof racks of my tow vehicle ( 4Runner ) and use it to feed my 6 volt battery bank while towing. Allowed me to easily keep batteries up and run fridge on 12 volts while towing. Just kinda fun.
I was considering buying the NOCO Genius10 but noticed the battery capacity rating for the NOCO is 230Ah. What does this mean for my 6 volt AGM batteries rated at 250Ah? Is the NOCO underpowered for my batteries? Will it still fully charge them?