Bob- Interested in your thoughts.. If my batteries are starting my boat sufficiently would a standard VHF in 25 watt transmit mode be enough to create a meaningful drop in system voltage? Seems two deep cycle bats in good condition would be fairly blind to VHF usage. I guess I would assume the power needed to run the VHF would be small in the scheme of things compared to pumps, chartplotter, radar etc.. What ya think?The manual says power requirement 25 watts output are: 6A@13.8V DC-Bruce
Quote from: "Bergertime"Bob- Interested in your thoughts.. If my batteries are starting my boat sufficiently would a standard VHF in 25 watt transmit mode be enough to create a meaningful drop in system voltage? Seems two deep cycle bats in good condition would be fairly blind to VHF usage. I guess I would assume the power needed to run the VHF would be small in the scheme of things compared to pumps, chartplotter, radar etc.. What ya think?The manual says power requirement 25 watts output are: 6A@13.8V DC-Bruce Bruce,Meaningful? Well it's measurable.Take my boat. 12 volt AGM battery showing a 12.67 volt state of charge will drop to about a 12.48 v indicated when you transmit at HI power (25 watts). That's a 190 millivolt drop.Doesn't sound meaningful in that context but....The round trip of center console mounted batteries can (depending on the length of the hull) run 30 feet. Take the standard 2 AWG battery cable size, use the 170 amp cranking draw and you can realize a 13+% voltage drop. That equates to a supplied battery voltage of 10.4 v when cranking. Using an 8AWG supply wire to your accessory buss (total run of 10 feet) and the supplied voltage at your radio (or depth sounder/GPS) can drop to 10.3v or so. Remember, this is based on excellent connections and wire condition plus as mentioned before a really healthy battery. If, as stated, 9.5 volts is a threshold, poor/corroded connections and/or wiring, not to mention an aging power source greatly increases the chances of crossing that threshold. So is .20 volts meaningful?In a robust system, no but when instrument failure occurs like Grizzly's, it should be looked at as an indicator to the overall health of the system.