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Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Mon Nov 04, 2024 12:28 pm
by Chris Singer
Hi All,
I have the Panther G powered with 2 x 12 volt Lead Acid Yuasa 22ah batteries in series
My set up is currently quite preliminary in that I still have to remove the turret to get at the batteries and charge each one separately.
Can anyone share a really simple wiring diagram to allow me to run wires to say the rear engine hatch so that I can charge each 12v battery individually whilst not disconnecting anything in the belly of the beast?
I have seen 'Tony' on Youtube use a breaker device, but cant figure out what else needs doing, and don't want live loose ends of charging cables flapping around inside the tank when in use?
Sure there must be really good simple solutions!?
thanks in advance,
C
Re: Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Mon Nov 04, 2024 1:51 pm
by Adrian Harris
I charge my batteries independently, and add a short lead to each battery with an XT30 socket on the end for that purpose.
I then run a pair of XT30-XT30 extension leads to wherever is convenient in that particular model.
Adrian.
Re: Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Tue Nov 05, 2024 2:34 pm
by Gerhard Michel
Re: Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Tue Nov 05, 2024 5:51 pm
by Martin Donnison
Hi Chris,
I fitted a remote charging lead and socket to the batteries so I don’t have to remove the deck to charge the batteries.
Re: Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Wed Nov 06, 2024 6:56 pm
by Andre Meylan
how about the wiring and not creating a short-circuit ??? I also have Yuasa's ... but with LiPo's ???
Cheers, Andre
Re: Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Wed Nov 06, 2024 9:55 pm
by Martin Donnison
Hi, as long as you isolate the breaker no voltage will get to the power control unit so it will be safe.
I use a 24v charger so all I do is power off the unit and plug in the charger.
Re: Turret-on battery charging wiring diagram??
Posted: Wed Nov 06, 2024 10:39 pm
by Gerhard Michel
Hi Andre,
in my opinion LiPos are
NOT a suitable kind of battery for our tanks. You mean LiFePO4 batteries instead, I suppose.
LiFePO4 batteries are either combined to one 24 volts block (8 cells) with a battery management system (BMS), or to two 12 volts blocks, also with BMS, or to 8 single cells without a BMS. The one 24 v battery can be charged like a 24 v lead acid battery. The two 12 v blocks should be charged one after the other to avoid BMS conflicts. The batteries may stay connected together while being charged, but you need an additional wire in the middle of the 2 blocks. This is the green lead at my control panels. The 8 single cells without BMS can be charged like a 24 v battery, but must have an additional wiring for each cell to connect a balancer. They need a specific LiFePO4 charging device with integrated balancer.
I'm using a very powerful LiFe charger which can load up to 10 cells with or without a BMS up to 40 amps per channel or up to 70 amps when combining both channels.