90-120 watt constant power draw with nothing on?

Oct 24, 2024
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4
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When I'm out and about in my Elddis Crusader Zephyr and staying off-grid, I use a Bluetti power station along with an extra battery to keep things ticking over. I plug it into the caravan's mains using the 3-pin adapter into the power station—pretty much like you'd do at home to a standard plug.

I've noticed something odd though: even with the caravan's mains power switched off, the Bluetti still seems to be drawing around 90–120 watts constantly. 🤔

Does anyone know what might be causing that, or if there's a way to stop it? I could just switch the power station off, but ideally I'd like to keep my 5G router running, which only uses about 10–20 watts.

Any thoughts or advice would be much appreciated—thanks in advance!
 
Oct 24, 2024
9
4
15
Hi, thank you for replying, I can confirm that the lights on the fridge are also off, it also does the same when the fridge running on gas overnight and all electric items are off, someone suggested that when on mains it may be trickle charging the leisure battery? Does this sound feasible? I would have thought once a battery was full it would stop charging?
 
Sep 4, 2011
467
259
18,935
Would say it is the Battery main reason. If the Battery shows 12.6 volts fully charged,switch the charger off and see if the current draw stops.
 
Oct 24, 2024
9
4
15
I just asked AI the question and got this might have answered my own question.! Same answer as you Birdman101 thank you! Presume to switch it off I just do at fuse board?

“That constant 90–120 W draw, even with everything in the caravan “off,” is almost certainly the built-in charger working to keep your leisure battery topped up — and those watts aren’t all going into the battery.

Here’s what’s likely happening:

1. The charger is always on when you’re on mains
  • Many caravan power systems energise the charger automatically when hooked up to 230 V, even if you’ve turned off lights, sockets, and other appliances.
  • The charger itself consumes power just to run — older or non-smart chargers can use 50–100 W even when the battery is full.
2. Float charging still draws a bit
  • When your battery is full, a modern smart charger drops into a “float” mode at ~13.6 V, which should use only a handful of watts.
  • If your system is older or basic, it may hold the battery at a higher voltage and waste power as heat.
3. Other always-on bits

Even with “everything off,” you’ll still have:
  • Control panel electronics
  • 12 V relays for fridge changeover
  • Any fitted alarms or trackers
  • Possibly a mains RCD/MCB board indicator light
If you want to prove it’s the charger:
  1. Plug in the caravan to your portable power station as normal.
  2. Switch off or unplug the charger at its breaker or fuse (often marked “Battery Charger” or “Converter”).
  3. Watch the wattage — if it drops massively, you’ve found the culprit.
If that’s the case and you want to save your portable power station capacity, you can:
  • Only charge the leisure battery periodically instead of continuously.
  • Replace the charger with a modern multi-stage smart charger, which may idle at <5 W when not actively charging.
 
Nov 11, 2009
24,512
8,735
50,935
I just asked AI the question and got this might have answered my own question.! Same answer as you Birdman101 thank you! Presume to switch it off I just do at fuse board?

“That constant 90–120 W draw, even with everything in the caravan “off,” is almost certainly the built-in charger working to keep your leisure battery topped up — and those watts aren’t all going into the battery.

Here’s what’s likely happening:

1. The charger is always on when you’re on mains
  • Many caravan power systems energise the charger automatically when hooked up to 230 V, even if you’ve turned off lights, sockets, and other appliances.
  • The charger itself consumes power just to run — older or non-smart chargers can use 50–100 W even when the battery is full.
2. Float charging still draws a bit
  • When your battery is full, a modern smart charger drops into a “float” mode at ~13.6 V, which should use only a handful of watts.
  • If your system is older or basic, it may hold the battery at a higher voltage and waste power as heat.
3. Other always-on bits

Even with “everything off,” you’ll still have:
  • Control panel electronics
  • 12 V relays for fridge changeover
  • Any fitted alarms or trackers
  • Possibly a mains RCD/MCB board indicator light
If you want to prove it’s the charger:
  1. Plug in the caravan to your portable power station as normal.
  2. Switch off or unplug the charger at its breaker or fuse (often marked “Battery Charger” or “Converter”).
  3. Watch the wattage — if it drops massively, you’ve found the culprit.
If that’s the case and you want to save your portable power station capacity, you can:
  • Only charge the leisure battery periodically instead of continuously.
  • Replace the charger with a modern multi-stage smart charger, which may idle at <5 W when not actively charging.
Wow, which AI are you using, that’s seems a very comprehensive response. Surely not the normal AI from Google. Interested to hear how it works out. How was your question phrased?
 
Oct 24, 2024
9
4
15
Used ChatGPT 5 (just been released)

Question 1
Will a leisure battery in a caravan continuously trickle charge when the caravan is connected to mains?

Answer 1
That depends on how your caravan’s electrical system is set up — they’re not all wired the same way.

In most modern caravans:
  • Yes, the leisure battery will generally receive a continuous “float” or trickle charge whenever you’re plugged into mains via the caravan’s built-in charger.
  • The charger isn’t pushing full power all the time — instead, it tops the battery up to full and then maintains it at a safe voltage (usually around 13.5–13.8V), so it’s more of a maintenance charge than a constant heavy charge.
However, there are exceptions:
  • Older caravans (or some budget models) may have a simple charger that only works when you manually switch it on.
  • Some setups only charge the battery when the 12V system is switched to “van use” rather than “car use.”
  • If the charger is faulty, disconnected, or bypassed, you might get no charging at all from mains.
If you want to be sure, the easiest test is to plug the caravan into mains, wait a few minutes, and measure the battery voltage:
  • If it rises to somewhere between 13.5–14.4V, it’s charging.
  • If it stays around 12.6–12.8V and doesn’t budge, the charger isn’t active.
If you like, I can explain how to check whether your caravan has a smart charger or just a basic one — that can affect battery lifespan quite a bit.

Question 2
I use a portable power station and it is always using about 90-120watts despite all electrical appliances being switched off in the caravan working

Answer 2
That constant 90–120 W draw, even with everything in the caravan “off,” is almost certainly the built-in charger working to keep your leisure battery topped up — and those watts aren’t all going into the battery.

Here’s what’s likely happening:

1. The charger is always on when you’re on mains
  • Many caravan power systems energise the charger automatically when hooked up to 230 V, even if you’ve turned off lights, sockets, and other appliances.
  • The charger itself consumes power just to run — older or non-smart chargers can use 50–100 W even when the battery is full.
2. Float charging still draws a bit
  • When your battery is full, a modern smart charger drops into a “float” mode at ~13.6 V, which should use only a handful of watts.
  • If your system is older or basic, it may hold the battery at a higher voltage and waste power as heat.
3. Other always-on bits

Even with “everything off,” you’ll still have:
  • Control panel electronics
  • 12 V relays for fridge changeover
  • Any fitted alarms or trackers
  • Possibly a mains RCD/MCB board indicator light
If you want to prove it’s the charger:
  1. Plug in the caravan to your portable power station as normal.
  2. Switch off or unplug the charger at its breaker or fuse (often marked “Battery Charger” or “Converter”).
  3. Watch the wattage — if it drops massively, you’ve found the culprit.
If that’s the case and you want to save your portable power station capacity, you can:
  • Only charge the leisure battery periodically instead of continuously.
  • Replace the charger with a modern multi-stage smart charger, which may idle at <5 W when not actively charging.

I can walk you through finding the charger in your caravan and checking whether it’s a modern smart unit or an older constant-draw type. That’ll tell us if you’re burning unnecessary watts.
 
Nov 11, 2009
24,512
8,735
50,935
Used ChatGPT 5 (just been released)

Question 1
Will a leisure battery in a caravan continuously trickle charge when the caravan is connected to mains?

Answer 1
That depends on how your caravan’s electrical system is set up — they’re not all wired the same way.

In most modern caravans:
  • Yes, the leisure battery will generally receive a continuous “float” or trickle charge whenever you’re plugged into mains via the caravan’s built-in charger.
  • The charger isn’t pushing full power all the time — instead, it tops the battery up to full and then maintains it at a safe voltage (usually around 13.5–13.8V), so it’s more of a maintenance charge than a constant heavy charge.
However, there are exceptions:
  • Older caravans (or some budget models) may have a simple charger that only works when you manually switch it on.
  • Some setups only charge the battery when the 12V system is switched to “van use” rather than “car use.”
  • If the charger is faulty, disconnected, or bypassed, you might get no charging at all from mains.
If you want to be sure, the easiest test is to plug the caravan into mains, wait a few minutes, and measure the battery voltage:
  • If it rises to somewhere between 13.5–14.4V, it’s charging.
  • If it stays around 12.6–12.8V and doesn’t budge, the charger isn’t active.
If you like, I can explain how to check whether your caravan has a smart charger or just a basic one — that can affect battery lifespan quite a bit.

Question 2
I use a portable power station and it is always using about 90-120watts despite all electrical appliances being switched off in the caravan working

Answer 2
That constant 90–120 W draw, even with everything in the caravan “off,” is almost certainly the built-in charger working to keep your leisure battery topped up — and those watts aren’t all going into the battery.

Here’s what’s likely happening:

1. The charger is always on when you’re on mains
  • Many caravan power systems energise the charger automatically when hooked up to 230 V, even if you’ve turned off lights, sockets, and other appliances.
  • The charger itself consumes power just to run — older or non-smart chargers can use 50–100 W even when the battery is full.
2. Float charging still draws a bit
  • When your battery is full, a modern smart charger drops into a “float” mode at ~13.6 V, which should use only a handful of watts.
  • If your system is older or basic, it may hold the battery at a higher voltage and waste power as heat.
3. Other always-on bits

Even with “everything off,” you’ll still have:
  • Control panel electronics
  • 12 V relays for fridge changeover
  • Any fitted alarms or trackers
  • Possibly a mains RCD/MCB board indicator light
If you want to prove it’s the charger:
  1. Plug in the caravan to your portable power station as normal.
  2. Switch off or unplug the charger at its breaker or fuse (often marked “Battery Charger” or “Converter”).
  3. Watch the wattage — if it drops massively, you’ve found the culprit.
If that’s the case and you want to save your portable power station capacity, you can:
  • Only charge the leisure battery periodically instead of continuously.
  • Replace the charger with a modern multi-stage smart charger, which may idle at <5 W when not actively charging.

I can walk you through finding the charger in your caravan and checking whether it’s a modern smart unit or an older constant-draw type. That’ll tell us if you’re burning unnecessary watts.
Awesome. Thank you.
 
Mar 14, 2005
18,959
4,182
50,935
My initial thought when 90 to 120W was mentioned was that's about what a fridge would consume, but that would not be continuous as the thermostat would interrupt, power from time to time. and it would be a more consistent value as its a resistive element. Battery charging was my second thought, but even then 90 to 120W is a far too much of a power drain when the battery is full. Even an older (i.e. not "smart") charger was running I would be very suspicious if it drew that much power in standby.

There are not many mains appliances in a caravan, and none of them should draw mains power when switched off by their own controls, so I'd suggest switching off every mains appliance you can, and if possible unplug them, then check powe units power consumption again. It should be zero. If it's not then it menas there is a problem with some items somewhere in the caravan and it needs to be checked out.

Hopefully there will be no power consumption, at which point reconnect or switch on each mains item appliance and check the consumption until you find the one that causes this parasitic power draw. then you'll know which item it is and you can decide what's to be done.
 

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