 |
|
04-01-2023, 12:40 AM
|
#1
|
Guru
City: San Francisco
Join Date: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,807
|
Anyone here understand how the Victron Argofet works?
Specifically, the "energize" pin. I've read the manual, and it is devoid of useful information, like how much input current and what current might be expected at the FET input with "energize" energized.
Many questions about this asked on the Victron Community forum, and never answered.
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 01:48 AM
|
#2
|
Guru
City: Gulf Islands, BC Canada
Vessel Name: Sea Sanctuary
Vessel Model: Bayliner 4588
Join Date: Jul 2019
Posts: 3,937
|
Source for this info is ca.Binnacle.com or Victron. it is 12v + sent from ignition on/run.
Quote:
Alternator energize input: Some alternators need DC voltage on the B+ output to start charging. Obviously, DC will be present when the alternator is directly connected to a battery. Inserting a Diode or FET Splitter will however prevent any return voltage/current from the batteries to the B+, and the alternator will not start.
The new Argofet isolators have a special current limited energize input that will power the B+ when the engine run/stop switch is closed.
|
Link HERE
__________________
SteveK
You only need one working engine. That is why I have two.
Sea Sanctuary-new to me 1992 Bayliner 4588
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 07:03 AM
|
#3
|
Senior Member
City: Jacksonville
Join Date: Mar 2023
Posts: 239
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by DDW
Specifically, the "energize" pin. I've read the manual, and it is devoid of useful information, like how much input current and what current might be expected at the FET input with "energize" energized.
Many questions about this asked on the Victron Community forum, and never answered.
|
Well I have one and looked and you are right. It says nothing about capacity etc it can handle. I have put 180a through mine if that helps. My info sheet gives an example of 100a and a loss of 0.1V
I would contact Victron directly
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 08:09 AM
|
#4
|
Guru
City: Walkabout Creek
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 9,102
|
Here's my read between the lines...
The Energize input enables some level of current backflow from the batteries to the alternator B+ terminal. It's current limited, so won't blow things up if there is a short, but enough current to power a voltage regulator built into the alternator.They don't say what this current limit is, but I'd guess something in the 10A range. The load on the Energize input should be negligible for any Ignition circuit.
As for current ratings for the Alternator output, that's in the datasheet and reflected in the model number, with 100A and 200A models offered.
Does that help, and if not, what's the concern? Are you trying to use it in some unique way?
__________________
MVTanglewood.com
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 09:45 AM
|
#5
|
Member
City: Punta Gorda
Join Date: Feb 2021
Posts: 14
|
My former boat had two Victron Aergofet to charge the house battery from the starting battery when voltage rose. Bow thrusters/windlass battery and stern thruster battery. Learned negative wires to Argo get needed 2 amp fuses in addition to positive fuses .
Argofet enabled the manufactured to use charging wire sizes rather than high current wires from midship batteries.
Netherlands engineer said info is in their blog but I never found it.
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 10:33 AM
|
#6
|
Senior Member


City: Casco Bay
Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 301
|
The energize pin just allows a regulator or charger to see voltage at the input stud so it can boot up. It is not for 24/7 use…
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 10:40 AM
|
#7
|
Guru
City: San Francisco
Join Date: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,807
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by twistedtree
Here's my read between the lines...
The Energize input enables some level of current backflow from the batteries to the alternator B+ terminal. It's current limited, so won't blow things up if there is a short, but enough current to power a voltage regulator built into the alternator.They don't say what this current limit is, but I'd guess something in the 10A range. The load on the Energize input should be negligible for any Ignition circuit.
As for current ratings for the Alternator output, that's in the datasheet and reflected in the model number, with 100A and 200A models offered.
Does that help, and if not, what's the concern? Are you trying to use it in some unique way?
|
The current rating spec for forward current through it are sufficient. The current, voltage, characteristic, output, and every other thing about the Energize line is non-existent in their documentation. It is a poor showing even by Victron standards.
I am powering the Wakespeed regulator from the B+ terminal, it will need up to about 10A to power up properly and feed the field. On the Victron forum this question, and the question about current bleeding between outputs and input have been asked many times and never answered. In those discussions a couple of people have had 20A fuses in the Energize line blowing. The only answer from Victron is 'that shouldn't happen, but maybe it could'.
I guess I will be reverse engineering this thing to try to find the answers.
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 10:52 AM
|
#8
|
Senior Member


City: Casco Bay
Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 301
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by DDW
The current rating spec for forward current through it are sufficient. The current, voltage, characteristic, output, and every other thing about the Energize line is non-existent in their documentation. It is a poor showing even by Victron standards.
I am powering the Wakespeed regulator from the B+ terminal, it will need up to about 10A to power up properly and feed the field. On the Victron forum this question, and the question about current bleeding between outputs and input have been asked many times and never answered. In those discussions a couple of people have had 20A fuses in the Energize line blowing. The only answer from Victron is 'that shouldn't happen, but maybe it could'.
I guess I will be reverse engineering this thing to try to find the answers.
|
What exactly are you trying to do with the energize terminal? The purpose of “energize “ is not to power other devices. It is to allow a charge source such as an alt to see a battery voltage so it can boot. The Argo FET will work with Victron mppt controllers, even without energize, but may not work with other Mppt brands..
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 11:06 AM
|
#9
|
Guru
City: Walkabout Creek
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 9,102
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by DDW
The current rating spec for forward current through it are sufficient. The current, voltage, characteristic, output, and every other thing about the Energize line is non-existent in their documentation. It is a poor showing even by Victron standards.
I am powering the Wakespeed regulator from the B+ terminal, it will need up to about 10A to power up properly and feed the field. On the Victron forum this question, and the question about current bleeding between outputs and input have been asked many times and never answered. In those discussions a couple of people have had 20A fuses in the Energize line blowing. The only answer from Victron is 'that shouldn't happen, but maybe it could'.
I guess I will be reverse engineering this thing to try to find the answers.
|
Unfortunately this is characteristic of Victron. The good side is that they offer up a lot more technical detail than most companies. But it’s hit or miss, as this example shows, and what information does exist is scattered all over the place in blogs, discus, community forum, Victron professional, etc, etc. It’s a treasure hunt, at best, and crap strewn across the floor at worst. And even more frustrating when there is no technical support, just “contact your dealer”. Do you really think Fisheries or Defender or Amazon would be able to answer the question?
__________________
MVTanglewood.com
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 11:44 AM
|
#10
|
Senior Member
City: St. Petersburg
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 389
|
@DDW:
R.C. is correct (emphasis added):
Quote:
What exactly are you trying to do with the energize terminal? The purpose of “energize “ is not to power other devices. It is to allow a charge source such as an alt to see a battery voltage so it can boot.
|
Do not use this port to power the WS500-that is not why it is provided. Power the WS500 as shown in their Quick Start Guide and other documentation. B+ (wire #6) from alternator output B+; B- (wire #5) from a convenient and solid B-. I usually use the shunt or the alternator B-.
__________________
Charlie Johnson
ABYC Master Technician
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 12:43 PM
|
#11
|
Guru
City: San Francisco
Join Date: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,807
|
I have wired the WS500 exactly as shown in their documentation: Red power wire to the B+ on the alternator. If the Argofet is working properly, this will see no power and no voltage with the engine off and the Energize pin open. Nothing will change when the engine is started unless there is sufficient residual flux in the field windings to begin charging, but this will bring the WS500 up in a rather unpredicable and disorderly fashion. This is precisely what the Energize terminal is intended to do - maybe. They don't say. Only that a "limited amount of current" is available at the input post. Why not spec it like real engineers and a real electronics product company?
There is no mention about how this current arrives at the B+ post. Does it come through the Energize input? That might explain the ability to blow a 20A fuse. Does the Energize input turn on the FETs to the ohmic operating condition, and allow current to leak from output to input? Which output? Why do I have to guess?
Once up and running, the B+ post has plenty of power supplied by the alternator to power the WS500. It is the startup sequence which is questionable. Yes, I can abandon the idea of using the mystery Energize terminal entirely, and run the power input for the WS500 to the engine start battery. Why even supply an Energize input then?
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 01:10 PM
|
#12
|
Senior Member
City: St. Petersburg
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 389
|
DDW:
Quote:
Why even supply an Energize input then?
|
As several have already stated, and quoted here from the techdoc:
Quote:
Alternator energize input
Some alternators need DC voltage on the B+ output to start charging.
Obviously, DC will be present when the alternator is directly connected to
a battery. Inserting a Diode or FET splitter will however prevent any
return voltage/current from the batteries to the B+, and the alternator will
not start.
The new Argofet isolators have a special current limited energize input
that will power the B+ when the engine run/stop switch is closed.
|
It is that simple: it is there to provide voltage not support a load.
But...the ArgoFET pre-dates the WS500 so it appears that the current provided is insufficient for the WS 500. So, to solve this problem, move the source for the #5 (B+ wire) to the output terminal of the ArgoFet which is hardwired to the battery B+. Problem solved. The WS500 will have all of the current it requires and you have the benefit of near 0VDC voltage drop across a battery isolator.
__________________
Charlie Johnson
ABYC Master Technician
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 01:52 PM
|
#13
|
Guru
City: San Francisco
Join Date: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,807
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by CharlieJ
DDW:
As several have already stated, and quoted here from the techdoc:
It is that simple: it is there to provide voltage not support a load.
But...the ArgoFET pre-dates the WS500 so it appears that the current provided is insufficient for the WS 500.
|
The technical documentation is conspicuous by its absence. "Provide voltage but not supply a load" means what, specifically? Voltage that can support no load is useless for anything, and can't even be measured. "Appears the current provided is insufficient..." - how did you determine that? From the non-existent spec for current? Any external regulator would typically be wired the same, per the instructions, and many predate the Argofet by decades (Balmar 612 as an example).
I know their laziness is not your fault, but it is nevertheless inexcusable, as is their unwillingness or inability to answer what should be a simple question on the forum that they have chosen as their support means.
That's why I asked if anyone knew how it actually worked. I can read the spec as well or better than the next guy (I am an EE). The spec is an embarrassment. A real spec would have at least some details about the transfer characteristic, a current sink max on Energize input, a current limit spec on output -> input or energize -> input (it doesn't even say which), leakage current when off, etc. This "spec" has exactly two numbers, the forward voltage drop and rated current, for a 5 terminal device. A poor effort, even by Victron standards.
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 02:39 PM
|
#14
|
Guru
City: Walkabout Creek
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 9,102
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by CharlieJ
@DDW:
R.C. is correct (emphasis added):
Do not use this port to power the WS500-that is not why it is provided. Power the WS500 as shown in their Quick Start Guide and other documentation. B+ (wire #6) from alternator output B+; B- (wire #5) from a convenient and solid B-. I usually use the shunt or the alternator B-.
|
Right. And the WS500 has a dedicated Ignition input that turns it in and off.
__________________
MVTanglewood.com
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 03:09 PM
|
#15
|
Senior Member
City: St. Petersburg
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 389
|
@DDW:
You have made your point that the Victron documentation is poor. Got it.
Quote:
"Appears the current provided is insufficient..." - how did you determine that?
|
By interpreting your multiple posts.
Quote:
and many predate the Argofet by decades (Balmar 612 as an example).
|
Here are the instructions for the Balmar 614:
Quote:
The RED Field Wire #2 in diagram at right is included in the four-wire Ford style plug and is factory installed on regulator packages designated with “H” at the end of the model number. The other end of the Power Wire is fitted with a ring terminal connector. In most applications, this wire can be connected directly to the alternator’s positive output post. When a diode-type battery isolator is used, the power and voltage sense (#9) wires must be connected to the battery side of the battery isolator. Power Wire is equipped with 10-amp ATC type fuse. The Power Wire must be fused to ensure against damage to the voltage regulator.
|
You have been provided a solution that will cost you nothing to execute and provide you with a working system.
__________________
Charlie Johnson
ABYC Master Technician
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 05:16 PM
|
#16
|
Member
City: Manching
Vessel Name: PANAMA
Vessel Model: Kong & Halvorsen, Island Gypsy 51
Join Date: Jun 2022
Posts: 13
|
I'm using an Argofet for charging 3 different Battery groups with one Victron MPPT. The MPPT needs the Energize at night, otherwise it will switch off and wouldn't start again, because of the missing B+feeding. Had some issues due to blown fuses - started with 2 Amps, ended with 20 Amps. So far it seems to work since three months flawless. One additional issue is the wrong battery voltage (- 0.5 V) shown in the MPPT's data at night, but that doesn't matter, because at day, when the solar panels produce electricity, the MPPT feeds itself and the shown battery voltage is correct as is all the rest.
One has to connect one of the three (or two) Battery terminals with the Energize terminal and don't forget the fuse. That's all.
|
|
|
04-01-2023, 08:28 PM
|
#17
|
Guru
City: San Francisco
Join Date: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,807
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by CharlieJ
@DDW:
You have been provided a solution that will cost you nothing to execute and provide you with a working system.
|
Yeah, I provided myself with that solution back in post #11, before you mentioned it. It is currently wired just as the Quickstart guide and your post #10 suggests.
If would truly cost nothing, then no problem, but it will need to be rewired to bring power from the start battery, a bit of a PITA in this installation.
I'd asked the question if anyone here understood how this device works - particularly the Energize input - and I guess the answer is no. Although some have discovered the obvious work around. Gypsy Island's post #16 makes clear that the Energize input has issues not explained by Victron. He has plenty of company over on the Victron forum.
|
|
|
04-02-2023, 07:40 PM
|
#18
|
Guru
City: San Francisco
Join Date: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,807
|
OK, I reverse engineered it. It is a pretty simple device. The mosfets behave like N channel devices with gate tied to the drain. It begins conducting at a low voltage (<1V) and the outputs follow the input. There are two, each feeding an output.
The Energize input appears to be just a diode between pin and the Input post, forward towards Input. Any voltage applied to Energize appears on the Input post with a ~ 0.5V drop. I only tested it up to 2A, the forward resistance appears to be very low. According to the spec asking for a 6A fuse, I guess it is safe up to that current. I didn't want to burn up my unit so I didn't test the limits. A consequence of these two things means that any current applied to the Energize pin flows directly through to the Input post and then to both Output posts as well as.
You can see the problem here: If I have depleted my house battery to 8V, the turn the ignition key, this essentially shorts my start battery fed ignition circuit to 8.5V, and very large currents could flow. Maybe there is a current limit of some kind hiding in the Energize circuit, but by numerous users reporting blowing 20A fuses I'd guess not a meaningful one.
Some other observations:
There is reverse leakage of about 1.18 mA from a 13V output to a ground shorted Output post, and 1.23 mA to a ground shorted Input post. Since the both output posts would normally be somewhere in the 12V range, and the Input post looking into reverse biased diodes, this isn't of too much consequence.There is no leakage to a ground shorted Energize pin.
If the input is driven at 13V both outputs sit at 13V. If one is driven to say 12.5V and the other shorted to ground, no (or only the very small leakage current) flows from the driven output. This shows good isolation between outputs, discharge from one to the other is very small.
As others have reported, if one Output post is driven at 13V, the other output and the Input post will float at about 1.9V. However if either is grounded only the ~1.2 mA leakage current will flow so this is just due to the mosfet construction.
The blue LED turns on at about 9V on the Input, and therefore also at about 9.5V applied to the Energize pin.
The conclusion of this is that the Energize input should only be used for anything with great caution. Connecting as the Victron documentation suggests seems like a bad idea.
|
|
|
04-03-2023, 08:47 AM
|
#19
|
Guru
City: Walkabout Creek
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 9,102
|
Wow, nice job sorting it out. It sounds like it would work fine if everything it working fine, but not so much of anything had failed, including one or more dead batteries. Sounds like a better way to use it would be to leave the alternator connected to one battery bank (pick whichever you prefer), then use the Argofet to divert charger to other banks, just the way you would use a VSR.
__________________
MVTanglewood.com
|
|
|
04-03-2023, 11:13 AM
|
#20
|
Senior Member
City: Nederland
Join Date: Oct 2022
Posts: 123
|
https://www.watersportforum.eu/porta...29861a3bec0f94
You can ask your question on this forum, you may get the desired answer.
Here are a few specialists who probably have the answer to your question.
|
|
|
 |
|
Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
» Trawler Discussions |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|