C
Chris W
Guest
I was considering putting a current shunt in my car to monitor current
draw from the battery. I found a 200 A current shunt and was wondering
if that would be enough. Obviously during normal operation I'm not
going to be pulling near that. But during start I could draw
significantly more than 200 A. The shunt I am looking at is ....
http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bin/item/SNT-200/search/200_AMP_SHUNT,_50MV=200_AMPS_.html
I'm guessing since it is rated at 200A, it can handle 200A continuously.
If it can, it doesn't seem like short bursts of high current during
start would cause it to heat up too much to cause any problems. If the
200A shunt isn't going to handle the start current, I guess I could find
a way to have it measure current for everything but the starter motor.
Then I could get away with a 100 A shunt.
--
Chris W
KE5GIX
"Protect your digital freedom and privacy, eliminate DRM,
learn more at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm"
Ham Radio Repeater Database.
http://hrrdb.com
draw from the battery. I found a 200 A current shunt and was wondering
if that would be enough. Obviously during normal operation I'm not
going to be pulling near that. But during start I could draw
significantly more than 200 A. The shunt I am looking at is ....
http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bin/item/SNT-200/search/200_AMP_SHUNT,_50MV=200_AMPS_.html
I'm guessing since it is rated at 200A, it can handle 200A continuously.
If it can, it doesn't seem like short bursts of high current during
start would cause it to heat up too much to cause any problems. If the
200A shunt isn't going to handle the start current, I guess I could find
a way to have it measure current for everything but the starter motor.
Then I could get away with a 100 A shunt.
--
Chris W
KE5GIX
"Protect your digital freedom and privacy, eliminate DRM,
learn more at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm"
Ham Radio Repeater Database.
http://hrrdb.com