Craig's Law of leftover parts:

If you take any item apart and reassemble it, there are inevitably left-over 
parts, therefore, if you take any item apart and
reassemble it enough times you will eventually end of with two of them.

Craig 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim Lynch
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2011 19:01
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Liveaboard] Any experience with the Link 2000?

I think the problem has been with me since the beginning, but I can't be sure.  
The old memory isn't what it once was, if I recall
correctly, which I probably don't.  What were we talking about?

The Link 2000 is a lot more complex than an amphour meter.  It is a complete 
battery reporting and control system.  Coupled with the
Heart charger/inverter, it is suppose to keep eveything working as required.

When operating away from shore power and not using the inverter, the meter 
(LCD) can report the battery voltage, the current draw
(or charge) and the number of amphours.  Of course you can reset the amphours 
at any time.  While I'm not sitting in front of the
panel all the time, it does seem that I'm charging one battery and discharging 
the other.  I have 190 watts of Solar panel
connected.  So I suppose the batteries could be so unbalanced as to charge one 
and not the other, but they were bought at the same
time and have the same code date.  The bank consists of 4 6V golf cart 
batteries connected as two 12V banks.  I guess I'll split off
the two banks and run one at a time without charging and see where they are 
after 24 hours. That may give me a hint.

Once I've determined what I'm saying is true, I'll give the reset to factory 
specs a try.  Good thought.

I've been using the "take it apart and put it back together to make it work" 
since I discovered the principle at age 14.  I think
I've been about 50% successful.

By the way, I think I'll be at Manderin Holiday Marina Friday for a 
bottom job.   Hope to get to see you if you're going to be around. I was 
talking with the fellow on the  boat next to me here at St Simons and he spent 
4 months last year in that marina.  He's a big racer.
Anyway he said it was inexpensive but far down the river.  I realized where it 
was and mentioned you to him.  He said he knew
exactly what boat was yours.  
He didn't think he'd met you however.

I'll be there "Allah willing and the creeks don't rise".  Except that saying is 
probably not very PC these days.

Jim.

[email protected] wrote:
> Jim,
>
> Actually, I am not familiar with the Link 2000.  I have an E-Meter, 
> the little round sort of amphour meter.  It will only read one battery 
> bank so I really don't know about the two bank type.
>
> My amphour meter does not connect to my inverter, it connects to the 
> battery terminals for power and for voltage sensing (two separate 
> pairs of
> wires) and to the shunt only so your setup might be different from mine.
>
> Since you leave the big switch in Both almost always perhaps you could 
> simply do away with the second bank feature and combine the battery 
> banks into one bank.
>
> Since the amphour meter seems to ignore one bank when reading 
> amphours, yet read both banks correctly reading amps when charging, it 
> would seem that the correct info is getting to the amphour meter.
>
> Perhaps there is something wrong with the setting up the meter.  Years 
> ago my Radar instructor taught us to troubleshoot puzzling problems on 
> complex heavy ship's radar by doing an alignment by the manual.  The 
> problem would become more apparent when we couldn't make a certain setting.
>
> Did it work properly at one time?  Did anything happen around the time 
> it started not reading the amphours for one bank?
>
> It very well could be a bad amphour meter.  Perhaps you should send it 
> (and the shunts) to the factory for testing.
>
> One thing I usually do if something stops working properly is to take 
> it apart and put it back together again.  Sometimes there is a bad 
> connection somewhere that is not obvious.
>
>   

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