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Old 07-09-2017, 08:12 PM   #4
crash test dummy
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Default Re: 2000 Club Car DS OBC/Charging Issue

Quote:
Originally Posted by sealy99 View Post
I recently purchased a 2000 48V Club Car DS that had been sitting in a barn for some time. It had a charger hooked up to it in the barn, which didn't appear to be suitable for a golf cart. The man I purchased it from told me the batteries had been replaced a little over a year prior. There was no charge on the batteries when I purchased the cart.

When I checked the water level on the batteries, the plates were exposed. I filled them with distilled water and it took just shy of 4 gallons of water to fill six batteries.

The charger that he included with the cart would not come on when plugged in. I assumed it was because the voltage on the batteries was so low. I purchased a new Schauer charger, plugged it in, and wah lah, it started charging. 14 hours later, it was still charging and batteries were percolating.

First question: After a full charge, the battery meter on the cart will drop by roughly a third after ten minutes of use. I can get around nine holes on the golf course on about half of a charge. The batteries are reading around 52V after they complete a charge
Is it possible that the batteries are just not accepting a "deep charge" and are damaged from being run so low on water? What is the best way to test this.
you need to let batteries set for 12hrs before reading voltage
after batteries settle you can use a load tester to see if they are good
with 4 gallons of water used the batteries are more than likely shot ( batteries hold 3/4 gallons of water full )



Second question: When I plug in the Schauer charger, sometimes it will come on, and sometimes not. I haven't been able to figure out under what circumstances it will and will not charge. My understanding is when the charger is plugged into the cart, the OBC will lock out the drive system on the cart until the charger is removed. It has done this, and other times the cart will still move when the charger is plugged in. I was told that when the OBC fails, it usually fails all at once and is not intermittent. It hasn't worked correctly in 24 hours. I don't think it's in float mode since the battery meter on the cart continues to read 2/3rds of a charge. I tested it tonight by bypassing the OBC with a wire from the neg terminal on battery six directly to the back of the charging port. When I plugged in the charger, it kicked on like it was supposed to. I purchased the cart on a budget anticipating having to buy a charger and batteries, but did not anticipate spending $450 on a new OBC. Is there a reason not to bypass the OBC permanently since I'm using a smart charger?
48v Schauer charger are rated at 15 amps it is a stand alone charger ... but not rated for the best charging algorithm , you can by pass the OBC and use it
Quote:
Originally Posted by sealy99 View Post
Thanks for the response. I couldn't tell you if the charger is made specifically for a Club Car with an OBC. I purchased it from a golf cart dealer and am assuming it is. When I first plugged it in to the cart, it came on and charged. I didn't have to bypass the OBC until now. The issue with it not kicking on at all is intermittent. If I understand correctly, the OBC really doesn't serve any other purpose than just maintaining the charge on the cart?
that is correct it tells the charger how much voltage was used and how much to replace


i would recommend that you get the DPI 48v 17amp stand alone charger for the club car and new batteries
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