WELCOME TO RIVER DAVES PLACE

48 volt golf cart problem

RiverDave

In it to win it
Joined
Sep 13, 2007
Messages
126,076
Reaction score
164,053
I used my golf cart for a real estate video a month or two back and ended up leaving it in the garage. It was plugged in so no worries..

Well golf cart chargers charge for a period then shut off. I musta left the stereo on or something because all the batteries are completely dead. So much so that the charger won’t kick on to charge them.

The batteries are 8 volt.. I’m guessing I’m buying all new batteries but I figured I’d ask if anyone had a solution before I go that route

IMG_5620.jpeg



RD
 

rivermobster

Club Banned
Joined
Dec 28, 2009
Messages
59,156
Reaction score
59,268
They can't all be bad!

Separate em all and test em one at a time.

8v? Really?

Edit: I just looked up the prices on 8v batteries. 😱😱😱
 

JUSTWANNARACE

I will not let them take me🤣🤣
Joined
Aug 28, 2018
Messages
9,098
Reaction score
25,425
Shock the battery. They have dropped below 2v and will require being shocked. I have shocked alot of 6v batteries with great success so I'm assuming you could do an 8v too🤷🏻‍♂️ I just used jumper cables from my truck usually after a minute or 2 you can hook the charger up and it will recognize the battery. It works on Li-Ion batteries also.

Just a thought.
 

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
Start with a volt meter. Check the total in series battery bank (48v) and then do each separately. Most likely they can be charged but the battery charger isn’t going to kick on if the bank is below what the charger needs to tell it that it’s safe to charge.

The battery charger should have a sticker or placard that gives the input and out range.
 

RiverDave

In it to win it
Joined
Sep 13, 2007
Messages
126,076
Reaction score
164,053
Shock the battery. They have dropped below 2v and will require being shocked. I have shocked alot of 6v batteries with great success so I'm assuming you could do an 8v too🤷🏻‍♂️ I just used jumper cables from my truck usually after a minute or 2 you can hook the charger up and it will recognize the battery. It works on Li-Ion batteries also.

Just a thought.

Hook a 12
V to an 8 v?

Really?
 

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
Hook a 12
V to an 8 v?

Really?

I would do it if that’s was my only option, but not without monitoring the voltage increase with a meter. As soon as I saw 7v I would stop and move to the next battery…
 

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
Without knowing the voltage of each battery you are just guessing. It could be as simple as a battery charger that is bad.
 

JUSTWANNARACE

I will not let them take me🤣🤣
Joined
Aug 28, 2018
Messages
9,098
Reaction score
25,425
Hook a 12
V to an 8 v?

Really?

Look at the charge rate of a 12v battery. Sometimes up to 16v-18v especially on old chargers(the good ones that are not "smart").. 13.5v-14v (what you car when started is most likely) is not going to hurt those 8v hitting them for a short period of time to "wake them up". Will you have to do each on individually, yes. Will it save you thousands in batteries, most likely. They didnt just "go bad" in a couple weeks. They are just in "sleep mode".
 

Motor Boater

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 21, 2007
Messages
4,403
Reaction score
3,824
The 48v charger won't charge if the batteries are too low. You need to charge them Individually with a stand alone charger. I'd imagine a 6v charger would work

This is the answer. I’ve had it happen to me several time. Charge each battery individually and then plug the regular charger in. Run the shit out of it. Charge batteries again. Put water in them.
 

Luvnlife

Head Ram Rod
Joined
Apr 11, 2011
Messages
12,202
Reaction score
5,849
Dave I’ve had this problem. The bats are so drained that they won’t signal the charger to turn on. Take the cover off the charger, plug the cart in. When you look at the charger it kinda becomes self explanator. You have to jump a wire. I don’t remember which one but follow the wiring and you should be able to figure it out, I did.🤔👍🏻🍺
 

WTR&PWR

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2021
Messages
1,009
Reaction score
1,672
if you know someone that has another 48 volt cart, use that to "jump" yours to bring the batteries up enough to get the charger going. have your charger going while doing this.
I agree. Have a buddy with a 48v come by and hook up jumper cables then Plug your charger in for awhile.
 

C-Ya

Int’l Maritime Captain
Joined
Oct 31, 2008
Messages
3,305
Reaction score
12,877
The 48v charger won't charge if the batteries are too low. You need to charge them Individually with a stand alone charger. I'd imagine a 6v charger would work
This is the answer…….

Just thought I would 2nd, the correct fix, to the problem.
 

500bbc

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2007
Messages
27,361
Reaction score
43,250
The 48v charger won't charge if the batteries are too low. You need to charge them Individually with a stand alone charger. I'd imagine a 6v charger would work
If it's a smart charger you don't need to do all the batts or bring them to full charge. Just enough that the charger reads low charge.
 

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
While 48v in general isn’t going to kill you, it is only a few volts away from killing you. Any attempt to hook up additional batteries without determining what the current state of charge is and checking the voltage is weak advise.

Could have a blown fuse, broken ground strap, burnt wire, bad battery connection etc etc

48v is safe but way less so than 6 or 12v systems.
 

WYRD

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2007
Messages
4,054
Reaction score
8,626
The 48v charger won't charge if the batteries are too low. You need to charge them Individually with a stand alone charger. I'd imagine a 6v charger would work
This is the answer…….

Just thought I would 2nd, the correct fix, to the problem.
X3 you can quit looking because this is the correct answer charge them all individually at 6 volts then connect them all back up and series and plug in your 48 volt charger.
 

riverroyal

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 4, 2007
Messages
14,436
Reaction score
20,063
Look like Trojan batteries. How old are they? Mine did this last month.
They were 4 1/2 years old.
Figured that's a really good life so I opened the wallet and cried
 

JUSTWANNARACE

I will not let them take me🤣🤣
Joined
Aug 28, 2018
Messages
9,098
Reaction score
25,425
Your buddies cart isnt going to jump yours. Have you ever been successfulruning jumper cables from a bare battery to a car and having it start? Most likely not if that low. In all reality you my only have one battery causing the issue. Draw a diagram of the series wires, pull wires and check voltage of each battery. If below 2-5v (most likely the one is 2v or below) hit it with jumper cables and be done. Then charge them individually. But I will say that if has dropped to low on any battery, that battery will not even recognize a regular 8v individual charger without shocking it.. JMO
 

rrrr

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2007
Messages
15,731
Reaction score
34,925
If you connect an individual battery to a 12 volt charger, its 14.4 volts will put a 3.6 volts per cell charge on the 8 volt battery. That's not excessive if it's run for two 15 minute sessions with a break in between to prevent over temperature. You just need to monitor the battery's temperature and make sure the electrolyte isn't offgassing excessive hydrogen. Do this outdoors, so there's less danger of hydrogen accumulation.

That much charge current will actually be beneficial, because it will act on the lead sulfate collected on the plates during the discharge and help restore the electrolyte chemical balance.

That should bring the battery's open circuit voltage up to the point that when they're all charged together with the 48 volt charger it will activate.

I installed and operated a few flooded electrolyte lead acid batteries back in the day, so I'm not just making this up.

MC-Lane-fig1-900x550.jpg
 
Last edited:

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
It seems like a low voltage disconnect could go along way to saving the batteries on these golf carts? Is there a reason they don’t have them?
 

Motoxxxloak

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 26, 2014
Messages
2,548
Reaction score
2,059
Just got off the water so haven’t read all the replies. I believe 48v chargers are all diff. Some won’t kick on unless there is 40v pack voltage. Some are 35. My recommendation is charge each one individually if you have a battery charger and go from there.
 

oldman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 8, 2010
Messages
615
Reaction score
1,205
If you connect an individual battery to a 12 volt charger, its 14.4 volts will put a 3.6 volts per cell charge on the 8 volt battery. That's not excessive if it's run for two 15 minute sessions with a break in between to prevent over temperature. You just need to monitor the battery's temperature and make sure the electrolyte isn't offgassing excessive hydrogen. Do this outdoors, so there's less danger of hydrogen accumulation.

That much charge current will actually be beneficial, because it will act on the lead sulfate collected on the plates during the discharge and help restore the electrolyte chemical balance.

That should bring the battery's open circuit voltage up to the point that when they're all charged together with the 48 volt charger it will activate.

I installed and operated a few flooded electrolyte lead acid batteries back in the day, so I'm not just making this up.

MC-Lane-fig1-900x550.jpg
Looks like the battery banks at our substations.
 

El Rojo

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 13, 2010
Messages
909
Reaction score
1,534
Like everyone said isolate a a battery or parallel 3 and use a 24v charger (some roller chargers have a 24v setting) and charge them so them so your charger will kick on and charge the pack. If batteries are still good get a smart charger...better yet if batteries are toast convert to lithium ion for cheaper than a pack of 6 8v acid batteries....
 

Taboma

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2008
Messages
15,438
Reaction score
22,250
Tested the volts on each.. we r buying new batteries lol
I've brought mine back numerous times over the years, just because they're showing dead doesn't mean they can't be recharged. Just don't allow them to sit in this state for long if possible. I had to re-charge mine from almost zero so many times because I never left them on a charger for months, I installed a switch and by-pass relay to override the minimum voltage prior to charging criteria.
That relay is basically a safety so the charger won't energize and shock you, it has to be connected to batteries with sufficient voltage to engage the relay in order to output voltage. So NO unlike the movies you can torture somebody with 48 volts.
In your case I'd do as rrrr suggested, bump each battery up individually with a 12v charger in stages until the read maybe 5 - 6V each. Assuming you have a charger that will energize with almost no voltage present. If not you could start the 12V charger charge by paralleling another 12V battery for a few minutes.
Collectively that should reach the minimum your charger needs to see in order to close the safety charge relay.
 

Tireman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 12, 2009
Messages
315
Reaction score
327
Youtube how to jump start a golf cart....it can be done
 

coolchange

Lower level functionary
Joined
Jan 1, 2008
Messages
10,415
Reaction score
15,430
If you didn’t go to zero, and they’re not sulfided they should come back
 

callbob

semi flaccid member
Joined
Jan 9, 2008
Messages
2,946
Reaction score
2,683
C'mon guys, this is River fucking Dave we're talking about. LS swap coming up. Go big or be poor somewhere else.
 

Taboma

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2008
Messages
15,438
Reaction score
22,250
By the way, if any of you have older EZ-Go 36V carts, with older non solid state chargers, here's the wiring diagram and associated pics with the by-pass switch and relay I installed in my charger to by-pass the safety and allow it to energize with essentially zero battery voltage.
After 30 minutes or so I'd switch it back to normal and allow it to continue to auto-charge as necessary.
Over the years I ended up loaning to a few neighbors who encountered the "insufficient voltage to initiate charge problem."

Golf Cart Charger By-Pass.jpg
 

Attachments

  • Golf Cart charger relay.jpg
    Golf Cart charger relay.jpg
    662.8 KB · Views: 0

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
My 36v cart has one. But if someone ties lights or a stereo direct to the batteries it bypasses that.

Are there 36/48v stereos and lights? I know there are but as a practical matter many many more at 12v. So there must be a step down transformer on the cart to use 12v stuff. Does anyone know if you can hook 12v to the transformer and get 48v on the other side?

IMG_0258.jpeg
 

oldman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 8, 2010
Messages
615
Reaction score
1,205
Are there 36/48v stereos and lights? I know there are but as a practical matter many many more at 12v. So there must be a step down transformer on the cart to use 12v stuff. Does anyone know if you can hook 12v to the transformer and get 48v on the other side?

View attachment 1429393
probably could, unless there is a diode stopping it.
A transformer doesn't know the difference, voltage in voltage out.
 

Taboma

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2008
Messages
15,438
Reaction score
22,250
So you pulled all the cables? Why not just try to restore the batts you have if you have gone that far?
Why is checking individual battery voltage cause for assuming he pulled the cables ?🤔

You can still test from the pos to neg terminals on each battery , or several, without lifting a single cable.
 

Taboma

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2008
Messages
15,438
Reaction score
22,250
Are there 36/48v stereos and lights? I know there are but as a practical matter many many more at 12v. So there must be a step down transformer on the cart to use 12v stuff. Does anyone know if you can hook 12v to the transformer and get 48v on the other side?

View attachment 1429393
wasn't any step down on mine, 12v lights as an example were simply tapped off one of the 3 pairs of 6V batts on my 36v system. I could see that if it was a substantial load, but otherwise the batteries will tend to self-equalize anyway when one gets drawing down more than the others in series with it.
 

mesquito_creek

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2009
Messages
3,909
Reaction score
6,786
probably could, unless there is a diode stopping it.
A transformer doesn't know the difference, voltage in voltage out.
wasn't any step down on mine, 12v lights as an example were simply tapped off one of the 3 pairs of 6V batts on my 36v system. I could see that if it was a substantial load, but otherwise the batteries will tend to self-equalize anyway when one gets drawing down more than the others in series with it.

In case you were wondering… I hooked up a 12v battery on a charger to the 12v side of the step down transformer and only got 12.8v on the 48v side of the transformer, so that doesn’t work…. Never mind! Lol
 
Top