Siskiyou
New Member
Hello everyone,
I’m new on this list. I live in rural southwest Oregon. I’ve had a 2006 Eagle 4WC for about 2 years. I use it for pleasure and work (as I do biological consulting – mostly wildlife work - that can require a good bit of travel and field work).
I’ve been checking this forum out for a while and get both inspiration (to get out and explore) and practical advice. Thanks very much.
I am gearing up for a 3 week trip down to the south California desert (Death Valley, Mohave Preserve, maybe Anza-Borrego). We love it down there. I’ve made a few modest improvements.
For one thing, I installed a double battery/ isolator system. Found a place under the hood of my 97 Nissan (4WD, 4 cyl, 5 speed) truck for the second battery. Took out the stock windshield-cleaner liquid container (and put a smaller one in a different place) and fit the 2nd battery there. I used a 50 amp-hour (20 hr. rate) AGM battery for the second (RV) battery.
I am having an electrical problem (not, to my knowledge, connected to the dual battery system) and, maybe, someone has some insight.
I lent my camper to friends last summer. They were getting married and needed xtra sleeping spaces for friends & relatives visiting for their wedding. (This was before the dual battery system was installed.) I had the electric line plugged in and, when I retrieved my truck/ camper, the battery was dead. I figured they left a light on for too long though they claimed otherwise.
Recently (and after the dual battery system was installed), I left the electricity to the camper plugged in and the RV battery dropped to low voltage in a matter of days. Nothing was turned on. The only things I knew taking energy were the alarms (one for CO; the other for Propane).
I found on line manuals with specs for these 2 alarms (CCI – model 3400 for CO alarm and CCI – model 7770 for the propane leak detector). According to the specs, together they should draw only about 1 watt. I have a clamp on DC amp meter. There appears to be an approx. 20 watt (1.4 amps) draw coming out of the RV battery and nothing (except the alarms) is on “that I know off”. When I pull the 30 amp main fuse in the 4W camper panel, the draw out of the RV battery drops down to zero.
Having a continuous 20 watt draw is unacceptable. I can pull the main fuse but that’s not a great option for when you want to turn on the light at night, etc.
Does anyone have an explanation for where the juice might be going? Or a way to figure out the problem? Thanks for your help.
Romain
I’m new on this list. I live in rural southwest Oregon. I’ve had a 2006 Eagle 4WC for about 2 years. I use it for pleasure and work (as I do biological consulting – mostly wildlife work - that can require a good bit of travel and field work).
I’ve been checking this forum out for a while and get both inspiration (to get out and explore) and practical advice. Thanks very much.
I am gearing up for a 3 week trip down to the south California desert (Death Valley, Mohave Preserve, maybe Anza-Borrego). We love it down there. I’ve made a few modest improvements.
For one thing, I installed a double battery/ isolator system. Found a place under the hood of my 97 Nissan (4WD, 4 cyl, 5 speed) truck for the second battery. Took out the stock windshield-cleaner liquid container (and put a smaller one in a different place) and fit the 2nd battery there. I used a 50 amp-hour (20 hr. rate) AGM battery for the second (RV) battery.
I am having an electrical problem (not, to my knowledge, connected to the dual battery system) and, maybe, someone has some insight.
I lent my camper to friends last summer. They were getting married and needed xtra sleeping spaces for friends & relatives visiting for their wedding. (This was before the dual battery system was installed.) I had the electric line plugged in and, when I retrieved my truck/ camper, the battery was dead. I figured they left a light on for too long though they claimed otherwise.
Recently (and after the dual battery system was installed), I left the electricity to the camper plugged in and the RV battery dropped to low voltage in a matter of days. Nothing was turned on. The only things I knew taking energy were the alarms (one for CO; the other for Propane).
I found on line manuals with specs for these 2 alarms (CCI – model 3400 for CO alarm and CCI – model 7770 for the propane leak detector). According to the specs, together they should draw only about 1 watt. I have a clamp on DC amp meter. There appears to be an approx. 20 watt (1.4 amps) draw coming out of the RV battery and nothing (except the alarms) is on “that I know off”. When I pull the 30 amp main fuse in the 4W camper panel, the draw out of the RV battery drops down to zero.
Having a continuous 20 watt draw is unacceptable. I can pull the main fuse but that’s not a great option for when you want to turn on the light at night, etc.
Does anyone have an explanation for where the juice might be going? Or a way to figure out the problem? Thanks for your help.
Romain