Howdy. Fairly new guy here. I've spent the last couple months rehabbing a '71 Alaskan camper for short 2-3 day ski trips this winter. I'm done with all the work except installing two 210 ah 6 volt flooded batteries in series that I will install in the bed of my F350 dually, outside the camper but under its bench seat.
Can I tap into the site's expertise to make sure I don't die by fire or hydrogen explosion?
Only thing I will be powering in camper is a retrofitted Platnium Cat vented catalytic heater, which draws 5 amps for two minutes during ignition, then .5 amps during operation. No lights. No fridge, no water pump.
Before I leave to ski, I will charge the batteries with a NOCO smart charger connected to AC in my garage, recharging when I return. Not using a generator, solar or alternator for charging.
The heater's positive and negative wires run to two posts in a four-pin Pollak plug on the side of the camper, with a 10 amp inline fuse before the plug. The previous owner then connected his battery (or batteries) with 10 awg wire to the male part of the Pollak plug. Plug them in and the heater works.
--- Is this crude setup safe?
--- I assume I need to ground the outside post of one of the batteries to the pickup's frame? If so, is a common battery cable (6-8awg?) acceptable or do I need something thick and specialized?
--- Do I need to install a 50 amp fuse on the outside positive battery post?
--- Are 10 awg wire leads from battery to Pollack plug adequate? I plan to eventually add a marine fuse block, but is Pollak plug acceptable for now since I am powering just one appliance that is fused inline?
--- Do flooded batteries discharge appreciable hydrogen when they are not being charged? In other words, do I need a vented battery box or just make sure outside air flows freely to side of truck bed when it is sitting in driveway charging?
Thanks. My ignorance, obviously, runs deep and I sense the dangers are great. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Bill
Can I tap into the site's expertise to make sure I don't die by fire or hydrogen explosion?
Only thing I will be powering in camper is a retrofitted Platnium Cat vented catalytic heater, which draws 5 amps for two minutes during ignition, then .5 amps during operation. No lights. No fridge, no water pump.
Before I leave to ski, I will charge the batteries with a NOCO smart charger connected to AC in my garage, recharging when I return. Not using a generator, solar or alternator for charging.
The heater's positive and negative wires run to two posts in a four-pin Pollak plug on the side of the camper, with a 10 amp inline fuse before the plug. The previous owner then connected his battery (or batteries) with 10 awg wire to the male part of the Pollak plug. Plug them in and the heater works.
--- Is this crude setup safe?
--- I assume I need to ground the outside post of one of the batteries to the pickup's frame? If so, is a common battery cable (6-8awg?) acceptable or do I need something thick and specialized?
--- Do I need to install a 50 amp fuse on the outside positive battery post?
--- Are 10 awg wire leads from battery to Pollack plug adequate? I plan to eventually add a marine fuse block, but is Pollak plug acceptable for now since I am powering just one appliance that is fused inline?
--- Do flooded batteries discharge appreciable hydrogen when they are not being charged? In other words, do I need a vented battery box or just make sure outside air flows freely to side of truck bed when it is sitting in driveway charging?
Thanks. My ignorance, obviously, runs deep and I sense the dangers are great. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Bill