A little short on juice!

We have a seasonal site at a campground on the Grand River near the village of Dunnville in Ontario, and Ontario is in the middle of an extended heat wave with daily temperatures around 30°C (86°F) which in the southwest would be very comfortable because of the low humidity. But we are not in the southwest and with close to 100% humidity it bring with it a feels like temperature of 40°C (104°F) and that makes it very uncomfortable. This is an old campground and only offers a 30 amp connection which would normally not be an issue if it was a clean power feed, and by clean I mean a connection like you would expect at your home where the utility supplies a good power source. We don’t have that luxury here with our supply being what I would refer to as a dirty connection, the dirty connection could be the fault of either the park or the utility.

In this case the issue is with the utility, as many of you know we are responsibly self sufficient with our lithium batteries and our 1500 watts of solar panels, but we do not have enough power to operate our air conditioner for hours at a time, so I usually operate one air conditioner on the parks power and power the rest of the coach from our batteries and solar.

Since arriving here at the park the power has always been a bit of a concern, old park, old wiring, old breakers and such. I was hoping not to have to learn the park’s system as we are just paying campers, but over the last two weeks we (I) have learned a lot about the parks system. There are approximately 70 camp sites, but some are not occupied, there are actually two different power sources into the park, I discovered that my source is supplied from a different village than the majority part of the park, in fact there are only six 30 amp outlets on this power source and one is unoccupied.

Five 30 amp sites would mean the maximum power consumption would be 150 amps at 120 volts or 75 amps at 240 volts. The utility supplies 240 volt source, a quick check of the main panel shows a 100 amp service at 240 volts which is equivalent to 200 amps at 120 volts, more than enough to supply the six sites at 30 amps each. So why is my roof air conditioner sounding like it is struggling to operate, a couple of minutes finds that our power supply is not maintaining 120 volts in fact it is dropping off to less that 100 volts, a real red flag for our air conditioner.

Not the kind of voltage numbers that I wanted to see at our supply post.

As simply as I can say it this is a major issue, during the week we are the only people in our row therefore the only site pulling any more power than the normal fridge operation in the other sites, but this happened on a weekend with four out of the five sites occupied, it’s hot and humid so four air conditioners operating. Now RV air conditioners are not efficient and pull a heavy power draw, but should be able to operate easily within the supply limits. So what causes the voltage to be 100 instead of 120? The answer could be what is referred to as voltage drop, and the easiest explanation of voltage drop is by trying to draw to much power through too small of power cord. If this is the case if I checked the voltage at my post and compared it to the voltage at the source they would vary greatly. Like if out post outlet read a voltage of 100 volts and the power supply at the main panel shows 120 volts it would tell me that our power supply had a bad voltage drop. In our case the voltage reading were only a couple of volts difference, proving the issue is a utility issue, I would speculate that it is a transformer on the utility pole which is failing.

I’m lucky we have an on board generator, so Saturday afternoon I decide to disconnect from shore power and fire up the generator, now the generator starts with power from the chassis batteries, we have owned the coach for eight years and the batteries were not new when we purchased the coach, in fact Miss Laurie and I discussed getting new chassis batteries this year before our fall departure. I had not started the generator or the coach since June and now when I went to start the generator I got a failure code from the chassis batteries! Not a big issue normally, but it is hotter than hell here today and the solution to this is the battery charger which is buried in the basement compartment, then the time to charge the batteries enough to start the generator, 20 minutes later with both air conditioners running off of our generator we watch the coach temperature drop from 31°C (88°F) to 23°C (74ºF) in an hour.

I have reported this situation to the park owners and now will have to wait to see how long it takes the utility company to resolve the problem, my expectation is not high but will push for a satisfactory resolution.

It’s now the first of the week, still in the heat wave but we are back to the only people in our row, and as bad as the voltage remains we are able to operate the one air conditioner, I have been sourcing new chassis batteries and will obtain then this week, these batteries run a number of things besides starting the generator and the main diesel engine so they are heavy duty batteries and unlike our house batteries they are rated by CCA (Cold Cranking Amps), our batteries are 950 CCA each for a total of 1900 CCA which is what it takes to start our big diesel engine on a cold start. The starter batteries have to be lead acid type and be designed as starting batteries, shock means they can provide huge amperage to a starter motor, deep cycle batteries can not and neither can lithium, our six lithium house batteries for example could only supply a peak amperage of 1200 before shutting down from overload.

After a day of research and price comparisons I have purchased two new series 31 batteries for just over 300 dollars Canadian which is an excellent price as most comparable batteries wound have well over 450 dollars. I’m now charging the new batteries which most places do not do, these lead acid batteries are brought to life by the seller flooding the with sulphuric acid when purchased, this means they remain shelf stable for years, and if being installed in a normal vehicle would be charged by the vehicle alternator as it drove down the road, we are not going to be driving anywhere for a while so ad the manufacturer suggests I will top both batteries off before installing, then the onboard system will trickle charge them daily to replace the items that draw power from them daily.

This is a lead acid battery chart – notice that a lead acid battery is classified as 50% discharged at 12.06 volts – from full to half in less than one volt!

The voltage on the batteries were 12.67 and 12.66 volts before charging, which according to a lead acid power chart has them at 90% charged and while good, is not 100%.

The biggest downfall of lead acid batteries is the very show charging rate, the battery shown below had a voltage reading of 12.67 volts at time of purchase, place it on my smart battery charger and it charger for five hours before the charger switched to a float charge. But now the battery has a reading of 13.14 volts which is what is revered to as a surface charge which is the voltage reading from the charger, after sitting for a couple of hours the final photo shows the fully charged voltage of 12.77, it took five hours to achieve that extra few hundreds of a volt the difference between 90% and 100%.

Purchasing big starter batteries, here is my tip for getting the best price. Ask your local trucking fleet where they purchase their batteries and the contact that supplier, for example I saved over $60 per battery, the closed competitor price wise had 2 in stock the supplier I purchased from had 2100 in stock, most truck fleet operators replace their fleet batteries well before they fail to avoid roadside service at overinflated prices.

Day 2874

Day 2778

A few days on a farm

We have taken a needed break, on our last blog we were at the Walmart in Welland ON, we have moved to a Harvest Host Cato Lavender Farm just a few miles east of Welland technically back in Niagara Falls. The first night is on our membership but the next two nights were $10.00 each, the parking spot is beside their drive way and is not totally flat but not bad, the google street view made the drive way look very narrow but when we got here it was not a difficult spot to get to at all. The weather has been bright and sunny but the overnights are still cold and where has been a cold breeze, enough to make a sweatshirt necessary.

Saturday we made a drive to our seasonal site, it doesn’t open until the 15th but we just needed to see how wet it was after all the rain, and as we suspected it was very wet in spots. We have a dry weekend and the owners were hopeful that it will dry out enough by Monday that they can move a number of trailers onto their sites. The park is on the Grand River and some of the park is on a flood plane so each fall they have to move a number of trailers to higher ground and then every spring they have to place them all back in their sites. We met Bob their as they are moving into the park as well, there was some confusion about the sites and there may be a better site available for us, but nothing firm yet, we may be able to get a temporary site for a week or so if it doesn’t dry up, we will check on Tuesday. We even had time to stop for some Lake Erie Perch and chips just 5 km (3 miles) from our summer home!

We met the hosts and wandered through the property, they have been here five years (moved from the big city) they have 17 acres of property and grow many different crops. their back yard is almost park like and is surrounded by mature trees and was home to a variety of birds, Miss Laurie got a chance to scratch her gardening itch and weeded and cleaned the Lavender row, it kept her busy most of Sunday. I spent time Sunday repairing the foot rest on the co-pilot seat that quit working at the start of our trip, I need a few pieces of hardware and some grease that I will pick up tomorrow and I can reinstall the motor.

I have also been playing with our onboard electrical, as stupid as this will sound I actually plugged the coach into itself. So let me try to explain this as simple as I can, I switched our 3000 watt hybrid invertor to “Invert Only” which means that it is running only off of battery power which is charged by the solar panels. Next I ran an extension cord from a regular 120 volt reciprocal that was powered by the invertor. Then I used a “dog bone” to change the 50 amp plug of the coach to a regular 15 amp plug then plugged it into the extension cord. Because our coach is a 50 amp rig it uses two legs of power, our invertor only controls one leg and if we are not plugged into shore power then the second leg normally has no power. But by using this extension cord I was able to energize the second leg, the second leg powers an air-conditioner unit, the electric water heater, the washer/dryer, and used to power the old fridge unit when on shore power. So all we have running on it today is the water heater and the ice maker on the fridge, so today I power the water heater to temperature and maintained it, I also heard the ice maker punching out cubes, over night I have switched the water heater off, but will se how it effects the batteries overnight powering the ice maker.

Monday afternoon, and I have completed the repairs on the c0-pilot foot rest, it needed what I used to refer to as a Varsol overhaul, the mechanical device was just packed with 27 year old grease and dirt, and to say it was more of a binding agent then a lubricant would be a fair statement. The mechanical unit was riveted together so I had to drill out the rivets and disassemble the unit to be able to remove all the old lubricant, used a petroleum distillate to clean all the surfaces, reassembled the unit replaced the rivets with nuts & bolts, reinstalled the motor assembly. I operated the foot rest a number of times to confirm its operation and I also adjusted the swivel lock on the seat as well, a total success in my books, but the inspector has not given me any feedback yet.

It is Tuesday morning and we have to leave this wonderful Harvest Host spot, today we see if we can get into our seasonal site or whether we are heading to a Boondocker’s Welcome spot for a few nights. I’m awake too early this morning, a call of nature and there seems to be a lot of road noise this morning, either way I’m awake and up at 6:00 am, we had a number of windows open overnight because of the warmth yesterday and it stayed warm overnight. But I think the noise is worse today because the air is heavy, there are clouds, and that’s all I got, but when Laurie got up she said the same thing. Our departure time is 10:00 am this morning we are going to Welland to the treatment plant to hopefully dump our tanks then will drive by our seasonal park to see if we can get in, and if not we have a reservation for the rest of the week.

Breakfast this morning was eggs, toast, ketchup (French’s) and a cup of fresh perked coffee, we watched a little of the American news, always entertaining what happens south of the border. At 9:45 we fired up Thunder and after a few moments of warm up we headed down the road back toward Welland, we pulled into the treatment plant on River Road in Welland and we told that they do not allow RV’s to dump here anymore and that we would have to drive to Niagara Falls to dump there. I thanked them and headed toward Dunnville to see if by chance we could sneak in before the forecast rain. We were meet by the owners and showed a spot that we could use for the season if it was ok as our site was still too wet, we decided it would be perfect and proceeded to make a run to get parked. We are in our site, we are stuck in our site for now but it is a nicer site that the original, we only have a neighbour on one side and while two spots further from the water it is a higher drier site so we are in for the season.

That’s where I’m going to close this blog out stay tuned for a report on out new site and how the Victoria Day celebrations were.