Re: Voltage is dropping
Reply #9 –
I am a one hand in the pocket kind of guy when it comes to electricity, so I have an alligator clip on my Fluke's negative lead. It gets connected to a good earth ground, or the next best thing that I can find. This morning it was a negative battery terminal on the source battery. Voltage is where it appears. Then you have to find out why.
LT403 wrote;
"I recently installed a VE multiplus which has not been working properly."
As good a place to start as any. Did you install a chassis ground for the frame of the inverter?
"I started to take some voltage readings and on the input side for the inverter charger voltage is dropping quickly from 120's down to the 60s."
Dropping quickly indicates a local problem without much current.
"I backtrack to the main circuit breaker box located at the face of the bed and the same situation was happening at circuit breaker number eight. No circuits are tripping the breakers."
I still say check the #8 circuit breaker by swapping in a known good part and examining the buss connection. Might and well tug on all the commons while you're in there.
"I checked the 50 amp line coming in to the main circuit breaker box and had the same results."
Did you check against the earth ground, the green wire?
"Next I cut the shore power and turned on the generator and had the same issue."
The caller is in the house. In my mind the generator should be earth grounded to the chassis so check an be certain that the 110VAC commons aren't floating above the chassis.