Translation of the original instructions
The orange light blinks for more than
3h and does not change to green.
3
No lights are on.
4
In 24V mode, the green and orange
charge indicators blink abnormally.
5
After having pressed the test key, no
light indicators are on.
1
2 leds blink intermittently.
2
WARRANTY
The warranty covers faulty workmanship for 2 years from the date of purchase (parts and labour).
The warranty does not cover:
• Transit damage.
• Normal wear of parts (eg. : cables, clamps, etc..).
• Damages due to misuse (power supply error, dropping of equipment, disassembling).
• Environment related failures (pollution, rust, dust).
In case of failure, return the unit to your distributor together with:
- The proof of purchase (receipt etc ...)
- A description of the fault reported
ENERGY STATION
The battery is sulfated or highly
discharged.
The fuse melt : Problem with the
power supply
No batteries
Batteries polarities reversal
Problem with the power supply
To charge a 24V external battery, the
Energy Station needs its 2 internal bat-
teries to operate.
The machine is plugged on the mains
and the charging switch is on.
There is no battery.
The battery voltage is to low.
The test updates every 0.5 seconds.
The battery voltage is on the rocking
threshold.
The charger detects the presence of a
sulfated or highly discharged battery.
It will attempt to restore it with a 24h
specific charge.
Replace the fuse : Check the power
supply.
The charger does not detect the bat-
tery or the battery is damaged beyond
repair (voltage >0,5V).
Connect the red cable to the (+) batte-
ry terminal and the black cable to the
(-) terminal
Check the power supply.
Place the missing internal batterie(s).
Switch off the machine. (charging
switch on 0) or disconnect the charger
from the mains 230V. Press again the
test key.
Check the internal battery connections
(fastening collars...)
In this mode, the charger is supplied
through the battery to test. If the bat-
tery voltage is to low (<6V), no led will
switch on.
While reading, take the most unfavo-
rable case.
EN
15