Battery disconnect problem?
Lyndall
Member Posts: 6
Hi ya’ll. Need help analyzing why my 2017 TAG boondock isn’t getting power from my fully charged battery. Details: worked fine past week. Before new trip, I charged the 100 Ah lithium battery w/ plugin outlet charger and then hooked up battery in camper. Then hooked camper up to shore power to get cooler going while packing. Then hooked up 7-pin. Disconnected shore power and drove to campsite. I believe (think) the battery disconnect was on all through all these (unfortunately?).
Got to campsite and there’s no electricity to any camper accessories (LED lights, cooler, fan, nada). Checked connections on battery, checked fuses on converter, checked breaker switches. All good.
Only thing I can think of is that the battery disconnect switch is out. Thoughts? Advice? Please!!!
Comments
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If the fuses are all good, it may be the switch is bad, or possibly a wire came disconnected somewhere.
Dave in Michigan
'21 T@G XL
"If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there." ~ The Cheshire Cat (Alice in Wonderland) -
So….rechecked the fuses when I got home and, indeed, one was blown. Now I know use a flashlight to backlight vs. evening sky . Duh. Thanks everyone
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I carry an inexpensive multimeter to check voltages, fuses and connections. You can learn how use one on youtube
RV 2016 T@G 5W
TV 2019 Outback or 2011 4Runner -
They make ATC and ATO blade-type fuses that have a tiny LED onboard that lights up when the main fuse link blows, making it easy to spot an open circuit. This might be the perfect application for those fuses.Lyndall said:So….rechecked the fuses when I got home and, indeed, one was blown. Now I know use a flashlight to backlight vs. evening sky . Duh. Thanks everyone
FWIW, the newer WFCO power centers have LED blown-fuse indicators right on the circuit board next to the fuses; makes it really easy to spot a dead fuse.Dave in Michigan
'21 T@G XL
"If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there." ~ The Cheshire Cat (Alice in Wonderland) -
Well damn. Happened again. Full battery replaced all fuses (even though they weren’t blown). No power in TAG. Wires underneath look fine.
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Were you able to get things working after the initial problem? What seemed to be the fix?
Do you have a volt-ohm meter? I'd start at the battery and confirm voltage at each step along the circuits to the end use points.
Even if voltage is good, you may have a high-resistance connection that doesn't allow adequate current to flow. But checking voltage is a good start.
Be aware that poor ground connections can also create problems. -
This is intermittent. I would closely inspect the wiring coming out of the power center. Look for a loose connection. It happens!
Sharon - Westlake, Ohio | 2017 TaB CSS -
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